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 Farm Land Rationalisation and Land Consolidation: Strategies for
          Multifunctional Use of Rural Space in Eastern and Central Europe
by Dr. Jim Riddell and Dr. Fritz Rembold
 Key words: Land fragmentation, rural livehoods, participation.  
 AbstractAfter 50 years of collectivisation, countries in
          Central and Eastern Europe CEE have made significant progress in the
          devolution of state-owned real estate to private urban and rural
          owners. This restitution of private property is considered a
          cornerstone for a future democratic, market economy and integration.
          Thus, priority was given to speed up the re-privatisation process,
          secure land tenure and property rights and develop land markets.
          Notwithstanding the remarkable success of the land reform process,
          land fragmentation emerged as a side effect with detrimental
          implications for private and public investments, sustainable economic
          growth and social development. Consequently less-favoured and
          least-developed regions with economies still depending on agriculture
          have been witnessing negative growth rates, soaring unemployment,
          mounting rural poverty and as a result, serious social and economic
          disintegration and wide-spread disappointment among local actors and
          stakeholders. This paper presents current work in progress of FAO and
          its partners to design, develop and test an integrated strategy for
          land consolidation, village melioration and rural development in
          representative locations in selected CEE Member Nations. 
 Dr James Riddell, Chief  Land Tenure Services
 Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations
 Room B-513
 Viale delle Terme di Caracalla
 I-00100 Rome
 Italy
 E-mail: Jim.Riddell@fao.org
 Dr Fritz RemboldLand Tenure Services
 Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations
 Viale delle Terme di Caracalla
 I-00100 Rome
 Italy
 E-mail:  Fritz.Rembold@fao.org
 
 Farm Land Rationalisation and Land
          Consolidation:Strategies for Multifunctional Use of Rural Space In Eastern and
          Central Europe
Index 
            Introduction and BackgroundA FAO Approach: Multifunctional use of rural spaceFAO Experience
              Current FAO Involvement in Land
              Fragmentation/Consolidation Endeavors4.1 Comparative Study of Land Fragmentation in four EU Accession
              Countries in CEE
 4.2 Proposal for Technical Co-operation Project in Hungary
              concerning Land Consolidation, Village melioration and Rural
              Development
 4.3 The Eastern and Central European and Central Asia Initiative
              on the Development and Maintenance of Property Rights (ECAI)
              Conclusions 1.
          Introduction and BackgroundIt give FAO a special pleasure to be present with
          you today at a meeting like this that brings together so many of our
          technical colleagues to discuss changes in land administration in a
          Region with which FAO has worked since its founding. The radical
          changes that were needed in European agriculture in the immediate post
          – WWII period in both the East and West occupied much of FAO’s
          early energies. How would farms be reconstructed, what size would they
          be, how would they be owned. The war had swept away most of the
          remaining vestiges of European feudalism and its landed aristocracy
          and what would remain would be dealt with during the post-WWII land
          reforms. But it was not clear at the time what pattern these
          reforming processes would take. For example, the more or less market
          supporting reforms of Germany and Spain and the government-led
          programme of Italy to create independent small family farms were an
          expression of a continuing faith in the liberal model that economic
          capacity grew out of secure property rights. Further these property
          rights were associated with the ability of a person to function as a
          full citizen in contemporary European society (1). Of course, we all know the other grand model that
          was tried, and there is no sense in dwelling unduly on it here. There
          are, however, a few important points that do bear heavily on our
          argument in the rest of this paper. When FAO worked with Member
          Nations trying to make various forms of social property models perform
          for agriculture, it was with a certain sense of adventure. Could this
          indeed be the way around the fact that rural livelihoods seemed to be
          stuck in what Rosenstein-Rodan referred to as the
          "low-equilibrium trap"? Was it possible to make agriculture
          just like any other form of industrial enterprise? Would agrarian
          history be swept aside, and a new society based on rational production
          of ever larger enterprises replace the rustic nature of private
          ownership of the farm, with its isolated management structure? The
          answer is quite clearly no in each case, or we would not be here
          today. All of us in this room are concerned with the building,
          registering and administrating the myriad of private interests in real
          estate that the citizens of our countries want to hold and transact. Thus, when the sudden changes came in 1989 it all
          seemed so easy. We would restore the old property rights through a
          well co-ordinated restitution process. We had well established
          procedures of title rejuvenation in our tool boxes. Old cadastres
          would be updated, new registries built and modern agricultural land
          markets would emerge, just as they had in Western Europe. But as we
          have seen, this has not happened, at least not during the first decade
          of change. Why? One of the reasons is surely that we have mixed-up
          restitution which was essentially a political and justice issue with
          economic thinking. Restitution was a necessary foundation to
          re-establishing the principles of rule by law in place of rule by
          party. In addition it reasserted the idea of the state as a defender
          of property rights. Since for a majority of the inhabitants the most
          valuable property held before the collectivisation was in land, the
          restoration of real estate was paramount to establishing the new
          political order. That the restituted property often had no, or
          marginal, economic value in modern European economy was not an issue
          for this phase. It is an issue that now effects us very much. The
          property was restituted, of course, in terms of its definition when it
          was collectivised. Thus the size, location and valuation all had to do
          with the agrarian and economic processes of the late 1930s and
          immediate post war period. This leaves us with the odd situation where we have
          property restituted in more or less complete disregard to more than 50
          years of centrally planned infrastructure (communications, irrigation,
          drainage, etc,) development. Thus, we find a large, sometime
          predominate, proportion of the parcels in rural areas that are
          unsuitable for the kind of rural economy that is needed in today’s
          Europe, to say nothing of the globalising economy. We need to add to
          this the fact that the social structure has also changed radically
          since collectivisation. The population making a living in agriculture
          has dropped enormously and development today is no longer rural led as
          it was in the classic pre-WWII land reform days. Urban centres are the
          dynamic engines and there will be a necessary urban, not rural bias to
          everything. Thus, rural development in Europe today will have to build
          on the "Rural – Urban nexus". There is no longer a rural
          community without its city. Thus, the line between the peri-urban and
          the peri-rural has become blurred. This is a situation that presents a
          great challenge to land tenure and administration specialists. 2.  A FAO Approach:
          Multifunctional use of rural spaceFAO recognises the challenge given to agriculture
          and food production by the process of rapid urban growth. It has an
          interdisciplinary group assigned to develop new programmes under the
          rubric "Food For the City". As part of this group, the land
          tenure and administration specialists at FAO have been recasting our
          existing tools to provide what we feel is a very sound way to assist
          rural communities in this process. The basic idea is to combine classical land
          consolidation techniques with the participatory approaches that have
          been made possible with the advances made in spatial data technology.
          Indeed, when FAO was founded it was just assumed that some form of
          land consolidation would be necessary for rural development Parcels
          had to be reorganized to take advantage of new equipment, drainage,
          irrigation and so forth. The second technical manual published by the
          FAO Land Tenure Service was on land consolidation (Binns, 1951).
          However, under the existing technological constraints it proved too
          slow and laborious a process. Some kind of cadastre had to be made of
          the existing parcels to ensure under the new plan, everyone would get
          land of equal value. By the time the existing situation was recorded
          and mapped to everyone’s satisfaction, the process would be held
          hostage to the resolution and sub-division of the property of those
          who had died in the meantime. It was taking 25 years or more to
          complete the consolidation of a single village and by the time it was
          done, a whole generation had passed away and it was time to start
          again. Many Member Nations sought to short the process by imposed land
          consolidation programs (Eastern and Central Europe, for example) which
          never worked. Indeed, by the 1970s the whole concept of land
          consolidation had fallen into disrepute as too expensive and too slow.
          The number of requests for such services received by FAO by and large
          diminished greatly. The current approach is based on a number of new
          principles: 
            Land consolidation has to be participatory, democratic and
              community drivenThe focus is on rural livelihood rather than on primary
              production of food staplesThe end result is community renewal, that is, sustainable
              economic and political development of the whole communityIt is founded on the principle of assisting the community define
              new uses of its resources and then reorganize its spatial
              components (parcels) accordingly. Spatial data techniques (orthophoto mosaics, high
          resolution satellite imagery, digital thematic mapping and so forth)
          have provided the technical fields associated with land resource
          planning with a powerful means of discussing land use and
          administration across decision making boundaries, from the farmgate to
          the national planning office. It has proven an effective tool for
          community participation in every situation we have been able to try
          it. Whether we speak to olive and wine producers of Lazio in the area
          outside Rome, Italy or rice and cassava farmers in Guinea, the ability
          of the people to define their spatial concepts and have these
          represented by the polygons on the technician’s/specialist’s map
          alters the entire process. It is their space we are discussing. It is
          within their concept of this space that that we are helping them
          create a new future. It is our conclusion that the technology of spatial
          data infrastructure (GIS, LIS, etc.) is a ground breaking conceptual
          frame that crosscuts all the resource planning fields and the people
          who depend on them. Thus, we can help people to easily see the
          relationship between their land tenure units (LIS) and the land use
          planner’s agro-ecological zones or the land administrator’s
          environmental protection areas. It provides a basis for meaningful
          dialog because the concerns of the land user, the planner and the
          administrator can be discussed at the same intuitive level. Another
          important aspect is that none of the parties has to be an expert in
          the technology. Often the government administrator in charge of
          environmental planning decisions, for example, has no more knowledge
          of the technology than does the land user. It is a tool, not the
          answer, and it is a cost-effective way to include in all our projects
          the means of allowing the land users to truly participate (2). These new participatory tools made possible by the
          advances in spatial data techniques have revolutionized another
          critical aspect of land consolidation programs. This is the
          presentation of alternative solutions. Under the traditional manual
          approach each variation during the necessary negotiation process
          required laborious redrawing the new physical map to maintain a
          semblance of precision needed. Each "what if?" scenario
          became an expensive, time-consuming use of scarce technical personnel.
          It is no wonder that under the constraints imposed by classical
          graphical techniques, one of the early classic FAO publications on the
          subject recommended an imposed, non-participatory approach (3). Of
          course it didn’t work, but the motivation was that participatory
          approaches were just too costly using pre-computer assisted
          technology. Participation to be a truly democratic process must
          at the same time be a truly interactive bargaining process. Land users
          must have an idea of all the possibilities, the effect of planning
          restrictions, policies and directives and to see the impact of their
          own proposals, change their proposals and have the time to think about
          the implications. The future of land consolidation/amelioration
          programs will rest on our ability to successfully bring together into
          a single conceptual package the needs, capabilities and aspirations of
          rural populations with the knowledge of agro-ecological planning,
          farm-gate level agricultural economics and sound sustainable
          environmental planning. For the first time we have the tools needed to
          achieve this level of sophistication. The future prospects of
          sustainable rural livelihoods looks much brighter on the land tenure
          front. It has to be underlined though, that land
          consolidation remains still very much a black box and its full scope
          of impacts is still very much an enigma since experiences, best
          practices and lessons learned from developing countries and countries
          in transition are scarce. Without thorough assessments in terms of
          research studies, surveys and pilot projects and thoughtful
          considerations regarding the integration of rural development elements
          to the conceptual framework any corrective measures concerning land
          consolidation and re-allotment may have undesired effects and add
          further to exclusion, marginalization and even impoverishment of the
          rural population. 3. 
          FAO ExperienceIn the 55 years since its founding FAO has assisted
          Member Nations in addressing the land fragmentation and consolidation
          issues under numerous circumstances(4). Based on this collective
          experience the Land Tenure Service has been focusing on three separate
          processes though a series of analytical studies: Those processes of fragmentation that are the
          result of cultural and legal traditions of devisement (inheritance,
          gifts, intervivos transfers, etc.). This is a dynamic aspect of any
          society and a number of institutional solutions have been developed to
          address the equity issues involved. Thus, while a single inheritor
          (primogenitor, ultimo genitor or right holder’s choice) has its
          rational in preventing parcel fragmentation, it calls into question
          what are the rights of other inheritors. Thus it is not surprising to
          find that a large proportion of the world’s societies have opted for
          more equitable inheritance patterns. In such cases, land consolidation
          programs have to work within existing cultural norms in a very dynamic
          way. Since all agricultural holding will be radically effected each
          generation cycle (approximately every 25 – 30 years) land
          consolidation cannot be a "one-shot" undertaking, but a
          continuing part of rural development, to be effective. Most of our
          current work in this area is focused on the Mediterranean Basin. Those processes that are the result of radical
          shifts in the demographic profiles of rural areas are the second area
          of current concentration. Rapid growth of urban areas has
          disproportionately drawn off the young from rural communities. The
          data indicate that this shift in populations is characterized by a
          predominance of males, the better educated and surprisingly, the rural
          middle and upper classes. Under such conditions, rural space will have
          to be reorganized if there is any hope for revitalized rural economies
          needed for sustainable livelihoods and food security. The third area of concentration on land
          consolidation issues involves those Member Nations that have recently
          undergone the process of land reform either via restitution,
          compensation or distribution. This is a situation that combines the
          other two processes in a very special way. To better understand the
          complex dynamics involved, FAO is working with numerous partners in
          detailed analysis of the situation in Central and Eastern Europe and
          Central Asia. The nature of these interventions will be the basis of
          the next section of the paper. 4.  FAO
          Involvement in Land Fragmentation/Consolidation Endeavors4.1 Comparative Study of Land Fragmentation in
          four EU Accession Countries in CEEFAO recently started a comparative study of land
          fragmentation and its impacts on rural development in four Central and
          Eastern European Countries: Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary and
          Romania. The main objective of the project is to analyze and assess
          the impacts of land fragmentation in predominantly agriculture based
          communities and to design and develop strategies and policies for land
          consolidation and re-allotment, including elements of rural
          development especially with regards to village melioration and
          renewal. After decades of collectivization Central and
          Eastern European Countries have made significant progress concerning
          the devolution of state hold real estate and property to private
          owners in both, the urban and rural space. Considered a cornerstone for market economy in the
          sphere of agriculture, priority was given to speed up the
          re-privatization process, secure land tenure and property rights,
          develop land markets and untie the inherent wealth locked within the
          property market. Further improvements in these key areas are likely to
          occur considering the favorable political environment and the
          comprehensive legal and conceptual framework. Notwithstanding the remarkable success of the land
          reform, land fragmentation emerged as a side effect with detrimental
          implications for sustainable economic growth and social development in
          rural areas as it constrains both private and public investments. Dispersed parcels and properties, scattered over
          different political, juridical and administrative boundaries obstruct
          spatial planning in terms of land administration, land use planning
          and management. Decision-makers are encroached by limited
          possibilities and alternatives to allocate resources. This hampers the
          implementation of rural, regional development policies, strategies
          programs and projects aimed to improve rural livelihoods. Beside infrastructure and service provision the
          agriculture sector is most affected. The parcels farmers received are
          often too small to survive in an increasingly competitive sector and
          often badly shaped, for instance in their length to width ratio. Both
          characteristics make it difficult to implement new production
          patterns, utilize machinery and appropriate technologies. Most of the
          plots are not adjacent to each other, and many not even situated in
          the same area, outside the municipal jurisdiction or even in
          neighboring counties. Compensation left farmers without a personal
          relationship to the land they newly own. Relocated in different
          geographical (and social) territory, experiences and skills gathered
          elsewhere do not fit into the new environment. This argument holds for
          individual farmers, co-operatives and the newly emerged corporations,
          such as public limited or joint-stock companies alike. In particular,
          the latter, created in the wake of the dismantling of state-owned
          farms, often work on hundreds of parcels of land and are engaged in
          thousands of individual limited-term leasing contracts. Consequently
          less-favored and least-developed regions with economies still
          depending on agriculture have been witnessing negative growth rates,
          soaring unemployment, mounting rural poverty and, as a result, serious
          social and economic disintegration and wide-spread disappointment
          among local actors and stakeholders. Despite certain commonalties, land fragmentation
          patterns differ from country to country and we have to distinguish
          between fragmentation of ownership and fragmentation of land use. The
          Czech Republic and Hungary managed to control extreme forms of land
          use fragmentation for the time being due to fact that co-operative
          farms were not dismantled during land reform and the current
          legislation allows lease agreements to increase farm size.
          Nevertheless transaction costs are high given the sheer number of
          short-term lease contracts and legal and juridical restrictions
          regarding freehold arrangements, which still hamper farm enlargement.
          Such is the case of Hungary, where co-operatives, according to the
          current legislation, are not allowed to purchase land. In this context it still remains uncertain whether
          the cooperative-type of farms will survive in the long run, especially
          in view of EU common agriculture policy and open market conditions. If
          a significant number of these farms fail to be competitive the problem
          of fragmentation could resume on a significant scale. This is clearly
          shown in the case of Romania where fragmentation of ownership
          coincides largely with fragmentation of use of the land since most
          cooperatives were dismantled at the outset of transition and this farm
          type virtually disappeared in 1992. At the moment the average size of
          private individual farms, which account for 62 percent of agriculture
          land is 2.3 hectares spread over 6-10 parcels. Estimates for Bulgaria
          indicate, that once the land reform is finalized, more than 2.6
          million private farmland titles, divided among 12 million parcels with
          an average size of 0.4-0.5 ha each, will be issued. The average size
          of the holding is approximately 2 has. With regards to the environment, collectivization
          and large-scale agro-industrial crop and animal production led to
          extensive clearance of the natural landscape and the degradation of
          natural resources. Since ecological damages cannot be remedied at the
          individual level, concerted action and joint efforts among and between
          public and private actors is needed. To make water and forest
          conservation effective, entire watersheds, river basins or protected
          areas have to be delineated and demarcated. This requires
          consolidation and re-allotment of plots and parcels together with
          clear and transparent ownership rights and, hence, clear and
          transparent duties and responsibilities. The situation presents a very real challenge to
          land administrators. Alongside the necessary normative framework,
          capacity building, stakeholder participation, conflict management,
          knowledge transfer, training and technical assistance are needed to
          raise awareness, build confidence and mutual trust. 4.2 Proposal for Technical Co-operation Project in
          Hungary concerning Land Consolidation, Village melioration and Rural
          DevelopmentThe Hungarian Ministry of Agriculture, represented
          by the Departments of Land and Mapping and Rural Development requested
          FAO assistance to design, develop and test a strategy for land
          consolidation, village melioration and rural development in
          appropriate and representative locations in Hungary integrating
          experiences, lessons learned and best practices from previous
          interventions. This is the TAMA land consolidation and village
          melioration project. Based on the outcomes of the preliminary results,
          the validated and amended concepts concerning land consolidation and
          village melioration will be tested in 6-8 municipalities. The final
          outcomes and results will provide Hungarian land administration at
          local and national level with an empirical foundation for developing
          rural livelihood strategies, policies, concepts and methodologies. Main FAO inputs include: 
            Preparing conceptual and methodological guidelines for
              participatory land consolidation and village development programs
              in HungaryDesigning and developing an operative framework for rural
              development, land consolidation and village melioration projects,
              especially with relation to the forthcoming EC accession programsAssessing and validating the process of data collection,
              processing, transformation and application concerning tenure
              security, property rights, land consolidation, geographic and
              spatial informationConsolidating the institutional, organizational and managerial
              framework for interdisciplinary cross-sector and multifunctional
              ‘One Stop Shopping’ scheme for local/regional rural
              institutions including public –private partnershipsTesting best practice experiences and lessons learned in
              representative, predominately agriculture based regionsDesigning and developing complementary research studies and
              analysis to assess and appraise the potential economic, social and
              ecological impacts of land consolidation and village melioration
              in Hungary 4.3 The Eastern and Central European and Central
          Asia Initiative on the Development and Maintenance of Property Rights
          (ECAI)The ECA Initiative represents a joint effort of
          experts from the World Bank, FAO, concerned governments from both
          donor and recipient countries and bi-lateral development agencies to
          secure the process of transition of post socialist economies with a
          focus on: 
            Knowledge exchange among partners in ECA and non-ECA countriesDevelopment of regional and country based analysis in specific
              areas related to real property rights development and maintenance,
              with particular emphasis on cross-sector awareness and
              understandingCoordination of international agencies and donor work to
              optimize the respective comparative advantages The objectives of the ECA Initiative can be
          summarized as follows: 
            Development and maintenance of real property rights in
              post-socialist economies,Development of a comprehensive conceptual framework for solving
              property rights problemsIdentification of regional commonalties that could be analyzed
              and addressed jointly to reduce individual project preparation and
              implementation costsBetter understanding of country specific situations. Based on this conceptual framework the expected
          outcomes are: 
            Rising awareness of magnitude and complexity of land
              administration problem at all relevant levels,Country-owned understanding of general regional problems and own
              specific ones,Setting priorities in land administration strategy,Personnel and other groups (civil society, etc. ) involved in
              land administration who have the proper training to support modern
              land tenure,Reduction of gestation and implementation periods of land
              administration projects,Improved public-private sectors mix in the production of land
              administration related services,Reduction of cost for the implementation of land administration
              systems,Improvement of efficiency of donors, international agencies aid
              and financing and, national resources from client countries. During several conferences and workshops on the
          subject of maintenance and development of property rights
          representatives from CEEC and CIS countries considered land
          fragmentation among the principal obstacles for increase in farm
          productivity and competitiveness, land market and rural, regional
          development. Consequently the Draft Business Plan of the ECAI
          underpins the priority to address this problem and several
          co-operation projects between FAO and bi-lateral donor agencies are in
          preparation. As the audience can see, this is a matter in which all of
          you here today are actively engaged. We invite you to join us in the
          activities of the ECA Initiative and seek your assistance in
          identifying opportunities for synergy with other on-going and
          contemplated efforts. 5. 
          ConclusionsIn general it has to be outlined that the term land
          consolidation is misleading, since it suggests an exclusive
          orientation towards the area of land administration. Access to land
          and secure property rights are crucial but equally important are rural
          development elements such as local capacity building, rural services,
          infrastructure, employment schemes etc. in order to improve rural
          livelihoods. 
            In transition countries in the ECA region land reform in terms
              of restitution, compensation and distribution led to extreme land
              fragmentation, which hampers sustainable rural development and
              affects all sectors with agriculture obviously hardest hit.Despite the fact that land fragmentation is widely known and
              recognized there are few interventions so far and no comprehensive
              study/research in CEEC/CIS has been carried out.Since the impacts and implications of land consolidation
              programs are still very much a black box careful appraisal is
              needed to avoid/mitigate/forecast negative externalities for rural
              societyLand consolidation represents a essential requisite for further
              interventions in the rural space especially for EU accession
              countriesComplex land consolidation processes provide an excellent
              opportunity to integrate land tenure services into the broader
              framework of rural, regional development and substantial synergy
              effects for instance joint activities concerning rural
              institutions can be expected.Lessons learned in Western Countries show clearly that for land
              consolidation participation is absolutely necessary and its
              implementation proved successful only where stakeholders and
              beneficiaries are involved in decision making processes and
              existing, informal approaches and schemes are recognized and
              integrated into local democratic governance institutions. Summarizing these arguments land fragmentation is
          considered as one of the major obstacles to achieve sustainable rural
          livelihoods, especially in transition countries.Therefore land consolidation ranks among the highest priorities for
          FAO/Sustainable Development Division and its specialized services,
          both Land Tenure and Rural Development, in CEEC and CIS countries. It
          represents both a challenge and an opportunity for further
          collaboration and strengthening the historic ties between FIG and FAO.
 
 (1) Our thinking here hinges on the
          critical relationships between the land reforms of Europe starting
          with Denmark in 1780s and freedom from various servitudes and hence
          the obtaining of political rights. This was a process, fundamental in
          creating social and political definitions of person that were still
          going on in many countries in Central and Eastern Europe when WWII
          began (Riddell 1995). We will argue later in the paper that this has
          had profound implications for the restitution process. (2) To use an analogy, people
          everywhere have seen the utility of using cellular phones, a
          technology that just a few years ago served only by the military and
          the very wealthy. The millions of users today need know nothing of
          packets, GSM, and so forth. (3) Binns, B. 1951 Consolidation
          of fragmented agricultural holdings. FAO, Rome. This slim volume
          is still one of the classics on the subject. (4) The Land Tenure Service is in
          the process of compiling a bibliography of all past land consolidation
          projects, guidelines, planning manuals and publications. 
 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTEDr. James Riddell is Chief and Fritz Rembold is
          Land Tenure and Rural Development Officer in the FAO Land Tenure
          Service. 
 Dr James Riddell, ChiefLand Tenure Services
 Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations
 E-mail Jim.Riddell@fao.org
 Dr Fritz RemboldLand Tenure Services
 Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations
 E-mail: Fritz.Rembold@fao.org
 22 June 2000
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