| FIG
          Co-operation with the United Nation’s Organisations and other
          International Agencies– The Approach of the German Agency for Technical Co-operation GTZ
Willi ZIMMERMANN,
          Team Leader, Cambodian-German Land Management Project, Cambodia
 Key words: Land Policy, Land Administration,
          Multilateral and Bilateral Co-operation, Sustainable Development. 
 1.
          IntroductionThe land question is currently being reappraised
          worldwide and greater importance is being attached to land issues in
          international co-operation. Fair access to land, secure land rights
          and proper management of land resources are fundamental keys to future
          social and economic development. It is becoming more and more obvious
          that Land Policy, Land Tenure and Land Administration play a crucial
          role on economic efficiency and the social balance of the development
          process. Functioning land tenure arrangements can be
          considered as enabling socio-economic and socio-legal infrastructure
          for development. But experience all over the world also shows very
          dramatically that badly functioning land tenure arrangements can lead
          to the outbreak of (often violent) land conflicts, land grabbing and
          corruption, worsening impact on the environment, increase of informal
          settlements, loss of government revenue and lack of productive
          investments. Development co-operation has to play a more active
          role in integrating land policy reform, land tenure development and
          land administration in strategies for rural and urban development,
          resource management, state reform and local governance. 2. Lessons
          LearnedSustainable development and right-based development
          are just two sides of the same coin. We have learned in many
          development programs and projects that land administration is only
          fully contributing to sustainability in an environment of good
          governance, rule of law and accountability. This calls for
          complementary strategies and agreements with the multilateral /
          bilateral donor community and civil society. GTZ is more and more negotiating with partner
          countries the move from supporting projects to supporting programs. In
          Cambodia the Land Management/Land Administration project is providing
          and receiving significant synergies by building bridges and signing
          agreements with projects on rural development, projects on
          decentralization, on coastal zone management, on gender related
          projects, on forest management, on community based land management, on
          irrigation and on demobilization/de-mining to add value and to
          generate wider economic and social impacts. This shift from supporting programs instead of
          isolated projects calls for creating strategic partnerships and
          networks with bilateral and multilateral partners, the private sector
          and NGO’s. Agreements, contracts and operational commitments are
          more and more replacing or at least complementing the
          often-frustrating efforts of co-ordinating the numerous donor
          interventions. State Reform Programs have a significant impact on
          the design of land administration programs. As GTZ experiences and
          studies have shown we have to tailor the project design much more to
          specific frame work conditions like Land Tenure in Post Conflict
          Countries in Transition (Bosnia, Cambodia, Mozambique) or
          Reform of Land Administration as a component of Devolution,
          Decentralization and De-concentration Processes. Since land issues are power related issues, land
          administration should avoid stabilizing authoritarian practices in
          centralised governmental institutions but promote participation in all
          land matters, involvement of civil society, transparency of
          transactions and clear rules for land-related accountability. Much more attention should be paid to formal but
          also to "out of court" mechanisms for the resolution of land
          conflicts as an integral element of Land Administration projects. In
          many countries up to 80 % of cases to be resolved in court are related
          to land issues. In Cambodia GTZ will join forces with OXFAM and other
          NGO’s to strengthen the capacities of the newly established provincial
          commissions for the resolution of land conflicts. An extended profile for "Land
          Administrators" working in international co-operation
          programs is needed to implement the new land administration paradigm
          based on good governance, right-based development and sustainability.
          Advisors in this field should be selected on the basis of the new
          paradigm which sees them as qualified facilitators of difficult
          political, institutional, legal and technical processes of change
          brought about by state reform, macro-economic adjustment and land
          policy reform. There is a clear challenge for FIG and all commissions
          to address this issue. The Role of Multilateral and Bilateral Co-operation
          in Land Matters To respond to the challenge of making land policy
          and land administration a catalyst for sustainable development and not
          a hindrance multilateral and bilateral institutions for development
          cooperation have to look for new ways of providing innovative models
          for complementary intervention based on common principles and values. The role of Multilateral and Bilateral Co-operation
          in Land Matters can easily be defined. International conventions and
          international agreements like AGENDA 21, HABITAT II, or World Food
          Summit provide an excellent strategic framework. But in actual
          implementation we still see poor coordination, duplicated efforts,
          confusing sequencing, different or incompatible voices in land policy
          orientation and bad integration in state reform and country
          strategies. There are of course significant synergies possible
          between the approaches by different multilateral and bilateral
          agencies. If each of them were to focus on its comparative
          advantages and complementary strength new models for coordinated
          intervention are visible. A multilateral/bilateral donor
          coordination group on land policy has been established last year
          (WB Rural Week 2000) as one model to create consensus on central
          aspects of land policy in development co-operation and build a network
          based on common principles and commitment. GTZ experience in Land Administration / Land Tenure
          projects indicates the need to give much more priority to the
          following basic linkages between Land Issues and Sustainability in
          Development Co-operation: 
            Land Tenure and Good Governance. Without the elements of good
              governance, the rule of law and accountability land
              administration/land registration can do more harm than good by
              making land grabbing and corruption more efficient and increase
              insecurity.The problem of land grabbing and misuse of natural resources
              (international resource pirates) is too often ignored in
              international cooperationLand policy formulation needs to involve civil society at large
              and guaranty participation of the affected people at all levels.Land Tenure and access of woman to land and other resources is a
              fundamental issue. Women’s legal status in land tenure
              institutions is generally inferior to men’s; they are often
              entitled to exercise only secondary rights. Landlessness amongst
              women-headed households and widows is increasing. In registration
              they are at a disadvantage compared to men as heads of households.
              In disputes, their claims are not easy to enforce. Women are not
              sufficiently represented in land commissions or land dispute
              commissions. The ignorance of the intertwining of land and gender
              issues must be considered as a structural obstacle to sustainable
              development.Land Tenure should always been seen in the broader context of
              resource tenure (forest-, water-, environmental legislation).
              Consideration of the interdependencies is essential for a
              comprehensive land policy.High rates of migration and birth rates are resulting in the
              dramatic increase of informal settlements in the big cities in
              developing countries. Does land administration have an answer to
              the regularisation of informal settlements, which make up to 75 %
              of the settlement structure?The bad management of state land in countries in transition and
              the loss of government revenues is a very much ignored but typical
              "Transition" problem. International cooperation is very
              often only concentrating on private land.High incidence in land disputes and inadequate capacities to
              deal with them call for effective mechanisms to resolve land
              conflicts (formal as well as out of court). Land Tenure /Land
              administration projects have to provide more effective support in
              strengthening appropriate mechanisms.Matching land tenure arrangements and sustainable land use (land
              readjustment, land banking) is needed to use urban and rural land
              more productive.Removing longer-term structural obstacles is necessary to
              progress from tenure security to investment promotion. How to
              generate an enabling infrastructure for rural and urban
              development is an ongoing challenge. Electronic networks improve considerably open
          access to land related information, help to create transparency and
          strengthen international connectivity. FIG could also play a leading
          role in making use of modern communication infrastructure for e-mail
          conferencing on very specific land-related issues and for distance
          learning. 3. Strategic
          Partnerships and Promising ActionsSome very recent or ongoing examples for GTZ’s
          strategy to join forces with Multilateral Partners: 
            The International group on donor coordination in Land Policy
              established in April 2000: WB/ FAO/ IBD/ AusAID/ DFID/ IFAD/ USAID/
              GTZFAO / GTZ on "Land Tenure in Post Conflict Countries in
              Transition"FAO / GTZ on " Land Fragmentation and Land Consolidation
              in South-Eastern EuropeFAO / UNEP/ GTZ on "The Future of our Land"
              guidelines on integrated Planning and Management of Land ResourcesHABITAT / GTZ on "Regularisation of Informal Urban /
              Peri-urban settlements"FAO/WB/Austria/Netherlands/GTZ and regional partners on "Land
              Rights in Countries in Transition"(ECA initiative) Bilateral Partners and NGO’s: 
            Finnish Cooperation (through FINNMAP) and GTZ on: Joint Plan
              of Action for Land Registration in CAMBODIADFID / GTZ on participatory "LANDnetworkAFRICA"OXFAM/GTZ on Capacity Building for the Resolution of Land
              ConflictsFIG/GTZ on Conferences and FIG-membership for developing
              countries Land tenure issues are closely linked with related
          resource tenure categories like water rights, forest law, fishery
          rights and environmental legislation. Land rights cannot be discussed
          in isolation where people use different resources according to the
          crop calendar and season. In Cambodia a Multilateral/Bilateral "Donor
          Working Group on Natural Resource Management" has been
          established last year to discuss with partner institutions the legal
          interdependencies between Land, Forest, Fishery and Nature
          Conservation. There is a wide scope and a high level of consensus
          for strengthening the already strong linkages between FIG and
          International Partners for Development. The author would like to
          extent special acknowledgement to the most promising agreements and
          networking activities achieved already by Professor Ian Williamson. ReferencesGTZ 1998: Land Tenure in Development Co-operation
          – guiding principles, GTZ Eschborn GTZ 2000: Land Tenure in Post Conflict Countries,
          case study Bosnia, GTZ Eschborn HABITAT 1999: Global Campaign for Secure Tenure,
          implementing the HABITAT Agenda: Adequate shelter for all, Nairobi UN Economic Commission for Europe 1996: Land
          Administration Guidelines with Special Reference to Countries in
          Transition, UN-ECE Geneva UN FIG 1999: Proceedings of the UN FIG
          International Conference on Land Tenure and Cadastral Infrastructures
          for Sustainable Development, including the Bathurst Declaration,
          Melbourne 
 CONTACTWilli ZimmermannTeam Leader of the Land Management Project MLMUPC / GTZ
 Ministry of Land Management, Urban Planning and Construction of the
          Kingdom of Cambodia
 P.O.Box 2291
 Phnom Penh 3
 CAMBODIA
 Tel + 855 23 213 817
 Email: GTZ.LMP@bigpond.com.kh
 28 March 2001 
 
          
          This page is maintained by the
      FIG Office. Last revised on 15-03-16.
     |