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      | Article of the Month - 
	  June 2013 |  
		Building on the consensus: FAO’s first twelve months after endorsement 
		of the Voluntary Guidelines on Responsible Governance of Tenure Paul MUNRO-FAURE and Andrew HILTON,Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, FAO, Rome, Italy
		1)  In May 2012 the 
		Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, 
		Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National Food Security, 
		which represent an unprecedented international agreement on the 
		governance of tenure, and place secure access to land, fisheries and 
		forests firmly in the context of food security, was officially endorsed. 
		This paper describes the first twelve months of the FAO work, with its 
		partners, in developing and implementing a programme for making improved 
		governance of tenure a reality. FIG is co-organising a Pacific Small 
		Island Developing States Symposium at Fiji, 18-20 September 2013 
		addressing the specific challenges for the Pacific area as a follow up 
		on the SIDS (Small Island Developing States and the Millennium 
		Development Goals) Agenda for Action, started at the FIG Congress 2010 
		in Sydney. I. INTRODUCTIONThe Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure 
		of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National Food Security 
		(“Guidelines”) represent an unprecedented international agreement on the 
		governance of tenure, and place secure access to land, fisheries and 
		forests firmly in the context of food security. The Guidelines are based 
		on an inclusive, transparent consultation process started by FAO (the 
		Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN) and then finalized through 
		intergovernmental negotiations led by CFS (the UN/FAO’s Committee on 
		World Food Security), and which included the participation of civil 
		society organizations, private sector representatives, academics and 
		researchers, and international organizations. They were officially 
		endorsed by CFS at its Thirty-eighth (Special) Session on 11 May 2012.
 
 
		
				| The aim of the Guidelines is to promote food security and 
				sustainable development by improving secure access to land, 
				fisheries and forests and protecting the legitimate tenure 
				rights of millions of people, many of whom are poor and food 
				insecure. 
 In the short time since the endorsement by CFS, the Guidelines 
				have received global recognition, including at the 2012 G8, G20 
				and Rio +20 meetings. In addition, CFS decided to request the 
				United Nations General Assembly, through the Economic and Social 
				Council, to further endorse the Guidelines and ensure their wide 
				dissemination to all relevant UN Bodies and Agencies. The 
				General Assembly’s endorsement, in December 2012, has since been 
				complemented by that of the Berlin Agriculture Ministers’ Summit 
				in January 2013.
 
 |  | The eradication of 
				hunger and poverty, and the sustainable use of the environment, 
				depend in large measure on how people, communities and others 
				gain access to land, fisheries and forests. The livelihoods of many, particularly the rural poor, are 
				dependent on secure and equitable access to these resources. 
				They are the source of food and shelter; the basis for social, 
				cultural and religious practices; and a central factor in 
				economic growth. Inadequate and insecure tenure rights to 
				natural resources often result in extreme poverty and hunger.
 Many tenure problems arise because of weak governance, and the 
				quality of governance affects the attempts to address tenure 
				problems.
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		However, the real value and impact of the Guidelines will 
		be determined and measured by their contribution to changes in the lives 
		and livelihoods of men and women around the globe, and particular of the 
		vulnerable and marginalized.This paper describes the first twelve months of FAO work, 
		with its partners, in developing and implementing a programme for making 
		improved governance of tenure a reality. The programme being implemented 
		by FAO and its partners is one of many initiatives on tenure. FAO is, of 
		course, not the only actor addressing tenure issues at the international 
		and global levels, nor to implement technical assistance at the country 
		level. FAO does, however, have an established role as a neutral 
		convening body, with established strengths in the context of the 
		Guidelines in putting new information in reach of users, of sharing 
		policy expertise, and of developing and distributing knowledge to the 
		field. Many actors, including government ministries, bilateral 
		development agencies, international financial institutions, civil 
		society organizations, private sector entities, professional 
		associations, research institutions, regional bodies and UN agencies 
		already have numerous existing and planned programmes and projects on 
		tenure in accordance with their own mandates and requirements. While the 
		overwhelming majority of these initiatives are not conducted as part of 
		the FAO programme, they contribute to shaping the overall environment in 
		which the FAO programme is implemented. As many of these actors, 
		including the International Federation of Surveyors (FIG), worked in 
		various ways towards the successful development of the Guidelines, FAO 
		encourages them to mainstream the Guidelines in their initiatives, and 
		to contribute to a shared knowledge of existing and planned work to 
		improve the governance of tenure. The powerful recognition of the 
		significance of the Guidelines by FIG President, Mr Teo CheeHai, 
		during the Rome 2012 General Assembly is indicative of the importance 
		attached by professional surveyors to the Guidelines.
 II. OBJECTIVES, NATURE AND SCOPE OF THE PROGRAMME
 The design and implementation of FAO’s four-year initial programme are 
		based on the principles of the Guidelines, i.e. human dignity, 
		non-discrimination, equity and justice, gender equality, holistic and 
		sustainable approach, consultation and participation, rule of law, 
		transparency, accountability, and continuous improvement. Implementation 
		of the programme at the national level is considered essential and will 
		be a key aspect of the programme.
 
 In line with the objectives of the Guidelines, the programme seeks to 
		assist all, with an emphasis on the vulnerable and marginalized, to 
		benefit from improved tenure governance. In particular, farmers and 
		other small-scale producers, indigenous peoples, ethnic minorities, 
		women, orphan children, illiterate populations, disabled people and the 
		elderly are among the groups most vulnerable to losing their tenure 
		rights in the face of growing pressure on land, fisheries and forests, 
		and will benefit from responsible, pro-poor and pro-vulnerable 
		governance of tenure. While the principal beneficiaries of improved 
		tenure governance are people in developing and transition countries, 
		people in developed countries will also benefit from enhanced tenure 
		governance.
 
 The programme supports improvements to tenure governance through the 
		creation or enhancement of frameworks for regulating tenure. These 
		initiatives are to contribute to improved national food and nutrition 
		security, the realization of the right to adequate food, poverty 
		eradication, sustainable livelihoods, social stability, housing 
		security, rural development, environmental protection, and sustainable 
		social and economic development. The programme covers land tenure, 
		fisheries tenure and forest tenure as well as tenure arrangements at the 
		interface of the land, fisheries and forest sectors, and tenure of the 
		natural commons. All of these are technical areas at the heart of a 
		surveyor’s practice.
 
 The programme links with, and supports, other relevant efforts such as 
		the Africa Land Policy Initiative (LPI), the Comprehensive Africa 
		Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP), and other initiatives to 
		improve tenure that are being led by donors, international financial 
		institutions and other United Nations agencies.
 
 Thematic areas of the programme include:
 
			Support to countries: responding to requests for 
			assistance;Awareness raising: assisting more people to learn more 
			about the Guidelines;Capacity development: preparing additional tools and 
			aids;Monitoring and evaluation: developing new approaches and 
			adapting existing ones;Partnerships: strengthening and developing collaboration 
			on improved tenure governance at global, regional and local levels.  III. OPERATION OF THE PROGRAMMEThe programme is flexible, providing responses to a variety of needs in 
		different ways.
 
			The provision of relevant information and technical guidance, 
			including initial country support in response to country requests, 
			is funded through a support system.  Support to countries. One of FAO’s functions is to provide 
		technical assistance to member countries in response to their requests, 
		and FAO has provided assistance in a wide range of technical areas of 
		tenure and to countries in all regions. The Guidelines are now being 
		mainstreamed into FAO’s technical assistance. With the endorsement of 
		the Guidelines, the Namibian Ministry of Lands and Resettlement has 
		expressed interest in introducing the principles and practices of the 
		Guidelines in its programmes. In the Philippines, preparatory material 
		of the Guidelines was used in the preparation of the Land Sector 
		Development Framework by the Department of Environment and Natural 
		Resources and Department of Finance. The extent of technical assistance 
		provided by FAO to member countries in connection with the Guidelines is 
		expected to increase over time, particularly with growing calls for 
		implementation of the Guidelines, such as that made by the Regional 
		Conference for Europe in 2012. Under the Support System this would be 
		typically limited to short-term responses to requests, for example, for 
		scoping and identifying possible approaches to address possible 
		interventions. Evidence from recent months already indicates that the 
		level of requests to FAO for such assistance is increasing markedly as 
		awareness increases, with more than twenty countries already in various 
		stages of requests for support.
 Awareness raising and the 
		dissemination of information have been the preliminary focus of FAO’s 
		activities in the first twelve months following the endorsement of the 
		Guidelines, with systematic regional awareness raising having commence 
		around the world some six months after endorsement. All stakeholders and 
		relevant parties, including government, civil society and the private 
		sector, continue to be primary target audiences for awareness-raising. 
		The Guidelines themselves have been prepared in the format of a small 
		booklet that is available in all official languages of the Organization. 
		“Voluntary Guidelines: At a glance” provides a short, simple overview of 
		the Guidelines and “Governance of Tenure: Making it happen” is a brief 
		overview of tenure governance describing the framework of the Guidelines 
		and the process for preparing them. A series of papers on different 
		technical aspects of the Guidelines were included in a special 2012 
		themed edition of the FAO Land Tenure Journal, and a further edition, 
		currently with the printers, addresses the various dimensions of 
		fisheries tenure. FAO’s website on tenure 
		http://www.fao.org/nr/tenure/en/ has been redesigned to provide a 
		single entry point for the Organization’s work on tenure and its 
		governance. In addition, and as a part of FAO’s regular activities, 
		awareness raising will also be focussed on FAO’s decentralised offices 
		at the regional, sub-regional and national levels.
 
 For FAO 
		Governing Bodies, the Guidelines were included in COFI (at a side event 
		in the Committee on Fisheries, July 2012) and in the context of COFO (in 
		a main session of the World Forest Week, Committee on Forestry, 
		September 2012). Two relevant high level side-events took place under 
		CFS auspices in October 2012. The Guidelines were presented at the World 
		Urban Forum in Naples, at the Human Rights Council in Geneva in 
		September, and in New York and Washington in October 2012. Briefings are 
		being given to ministries and bilateral agencies of individual countries 
		in response to their requests for updates. The Guidelines are playing a 
		role in many meetings and fora throughout 2013, including the Global 
		Forum for Food and Agriculture and the Policies Against Hunger 
		conference series where the Berlin Agriculture Ministers’ Summit roundly 
		endorsed them and encouraged their implementation.
 
 Regional technical meetings for awareness raising are well under 
		way. The series of ten major meetings started in the Africa region, in 
		close collaboration with the AU/UNECA/AfDB Land Policy Initiative (LPI) 
		in Yaoundé in December 2012, and in Kigale in February 2013. The balance 
		of meetings will be completed by the end of September 2013.These 
		meetings are raising awareness of the Guidelines and related materials, 
		and allowing the 80 and more participants to think and discuss how they 
		can use the Guidelines when they return home. The meetings are designed 
		to help build or extend peer networks of interested people in each 
		region, and to identify existing mechanisms and initiatives in countries 
		that may support improvements to tenure governance at the country level. 
		There are already regional proposals from the FAO Regional Office levels 
		to extend the dissemination specifically to the country level in 
		selected regions where resources are available. The meetings involve all 
		stakeholders, including civil society organizations and the private 
		sector. The latter stakeholder groups are being particularly targeted to 
		ensure appropriate participation.
 
 Capacity development. 
		The preparation of additional tools and aids is well underway to support 
		understanding and sharing of methodologies and good practices, with the 
		initial focus on technical guides covering the following specific 
		aspects of the Guidelines:
 
			Gender-equitable governance of tenure;Tenure governance in fisheries;Tenure governance in forestry;Tenure of indigenous peoples;Land tenure aspects of agricultural investments. In addition, work on a technical guide on governance of water tenure 
		is being carried out, although not directly in the context of the 
		Guidelines. The first of those listed, “Governing Land for Women and 
		Men”, has already been published, and the remainder are either in 
		press or will be available in printed form before the end of 2013. 
		E-learning tools that provide an introduction to the Guidelines are also 
		in preparation. As with other FAO technical guides, the guides and 
		e-learning materials are not negotiated documents. Instead , they are 
		prepared with technical experts and are undergoing peer reviews before 
		finalization and publication. They present a technical elaboration of 
		principles and good practices in selected areas of the Guidelines in the 
		form of processes and actions. Technical guides on additional topics are 
		already planned for preparation, and resources are already being made 
		available by interested donors. 
 Monitoring and evaluation. There is considerable interest in the 
		monitoring and evaluation of tenure governance. FAO, working with civil 
		society, has encouraged the documentation of civil society’s perspective 
		on monitoring of tenure governance. The research undertaken by civil 
		society explores ways of monitoring the governance of tenure and 
		provides an overview of existing monitoring and evaluation systems and 
		practices in relation to tenure that are being used, including by civil 
		society organizations. With regard to the Guidelines themselves, they 
		are voluntary and not an international treaty with a monitoring body. 
		While the Guidelines call for a report to CFS on the progress of 
		implementation of the Guidelines, FAO does not endeavour to, nor does it 
		have the capacity to, monitor the extent of implementation of the 
		Guidelines by individual countries. Ongoing discussions within CFS are, 
		however, looking towards how these requirements can best be fulfilled.
 
 Open and inclusive partnerships were an important factor in the 
		successful development of the Guidelines and such partnerships are 
		crucial for improving tenure governance. Further extending and expanding 
		partnerships and networks, and, where needed, creating new partnerships 
		with all interested stakeholders, are vital for the establishment of 
		thematic and regional networks to support improved tenure governance, 
		for the effective and efficient implementation of Voluntary Guidelines 
		related work in support of implementation, and for providing a platform 
		for integrating and disseminating the work planned by FAO under this 
		programme.
 
 The improvement of tenure governance is dependent upon the contributions 
		of people from all sectors (i.e. public and private sectors, civil 
		society organizations, and academia), and through representation at all 
		levels (i.e. local, national and international organizations). In the 
		short time following the endorsement of the Guidelines, a number of 
		partners have taken steps to disseminate information and to raise 
		awareness through their own networks. For example, several partners have 
		posted information on the Guidelines on their own websites, and an 
		informative guide has been prepared by ActionAid and International Food 
		Security Network, with co-funding by the European Commission (“A 
		brief introduction to the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible 
		Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of 
		National Food Security”). Others, such as the World Bank and IFC, 
		have decided to mainstream the Voluntary Guidelines throughout their 
		activities, both in implementation, and in informing revisions to 
		safeguard policies.
 
 For the medium term, strategically important thematic approaches are 
		being developed with partners to promote and ensure active dissemination 
		and inclusion of the Guidelines and related materials as standard 
		reference points. As an example, FAO is supporting the development of 
		academic networks and core materials for the inclusion of the Guidelines 
		and related themes of tenure governance in academic programmes, and a 
		technical paper addressing these matters is being prepared. Another 
		medium-term initiative is the continuing development of inexpensive, 
		open source software for recording land tenure rights (SOLA), which is 
		being piloted by FAO and its partners. This work is in recognition of 
		the critical importance of appropriate, adequate, affordable and 
		accessible data models for land administration to implement the core 
		principles of the Guidelines, and is being piloted with interested 
		governments and land administration bodies.
 Programme fundingSupport for implementation of the Guidelines is included in FAO’s 
		current Strategic Framework and work programme, and FAO Council 
		requested FAO in June 2012 to ensure that the Guidelines are included as 
		a priority in the new Strategic Framework being developed and in 
		relevant work programmes. Demand for tenure related work from FAO is 
		already showing signs of significant increase, as awareness of the 
		Voluntary Guidelines becomes more widespread.
 In addition, implementation of the programme requires substantial 
		financial resources from voluntary contributions over the coming years. 
		Almost $10mn has so far been committed or promised as contributions 
		towards supporting implementation of the Voluntary Guidelines. The 
		voluntary contributions for the support system are to provide for:
 
			Direct technical assistance to respond to requests from 
			countries and civil society organizations to help improve tenure 
			governance;Regional meetings and other activities to disseminate widely and 
			increase awareness of the Guidelines and their use;The preparation of additional technical guidance and other 
			materials and activities for capacity development that are relevant 
			to global, regional and national audiences;Support for the development of effective monitoring and 
			evaluation;Partnerships;Increased capacity of FAO to respond to the rapidly rising 
			number of requests for support for guidance and assistance in the 
			context of these areas of activity. FAO has become internationally 
			recognized as a centre of excellence in tenure of land, fisheries 
			and forests, and has the technical expertise to respond to requests. 
			However, the increasing number of requests for assistance arising 
			from the high interest created by the Guidelines is exceeding FAO’s 
			capacity to respond. The financing of additional tenure project 
			posts is being sought in order to maintain responsiveness. IV. CONTINUING THE ENGAGEMENT AND DIALOGUEThe participatory and dynamic dialogue on tenure governance, developed 
		during the preparation and negotiation of the Guidelines, will be 
		continued and extended in various ways. FAO seeks to continue and enrich 
		the engagement and interaction with member countries, civil society 
		organizations, the private sector and academia. In doing so, it aims to 
		be responsive to the needs of member countries and others. FAO is 
		committed to work in partnership to improve tenure governance for the 
		benefit of all, with an emphasis on vulnerable and marginalized people, 
		and with the overall goal of achieving food security for all.
 Further information: 
			SIDS - Agenda for ActionPacific Small Island Developing States Symposium at Fiji, 18-20 
			September 2013 (information to follow) 
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