| 
	  News in 2022
  | 
	Fit-for-Purpose Land Administration - Providing Secure Land Rights at 
	Scale
		January 2022
		Guest Editors: Prof Stig Enemark, Dr Robin McLaren, Prof Christiaan 
		Lemmen 
		This Special Issue of the open access Land Journal provides an 
		insight, collated from 26 articles, focusing on various aspects of the 
		Fit-For-Purpose Land Administration (FFPLA) concept and its application. 
		It presents some influential and innovative trends and recommendations 
		for designing, implementing, maintaining and further developing FFP 
		solutions for providing secure land rights at scale. 
		
		
		The first group of 14 articles is published in Volume One 
		and discusses various conceptual innovations related to spatial, legal 
		and institutional aspects of FFPLA and its wider applications within 
		land use management. The second group of 12 articles is published in
		Volume Two and focuses on case studies from various 
		countries throughout the world, providing evidence and lessons learned 
		from the FFPLA implementation process. 
		
		
		
		The Key Experiences and Lessons Learnt are:
		
			- FFPLA Pilot projects – are easy to implement and well accepted 
			and understood by the local community. However – it must be 
			scalable. 
- FFPLA National projects – can be completed at affordable costs < 
			10 USD per parcel and within a few years by using a participatory 
			approach and working in parallel throughout the country. This is in 
			principle a national top-down approach that requires strong 
			political will and support from key senior civil servants. 
- Technology development – is a key driver in terms of providing 
			the relevant mapping and registration tools e.g. machine learning to 
			extract information from drone imagery. 
- Innovative financing – can be obtained e.g. through new types of 
			PPP and private sector support for regularization and upgrading of 
			informal settlements 
- The FFPLA approach is unfolding beyond providing security of 
			tenure – e.g. for mitigating land issues in violent conflict 
			settings, and for wider land management functions such as valuation, 
			urban resilience, climate change and pandemics. 
- The FFPLA approach is gaining momentum – and growing acceptance 
			within the (younger) land professional community as a game changer 
			in achieving key aspects of the global agenda, the SDGs, towards 
			greater social equity, leaving no on behind. 
Read the Special Issue:
		
		
		 
		
		 
		Louise Friis-Hansen
		6 January 2022