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Recognising land rights for conservation? tenure reforms in the Northern Sierra Madre, The Philippines
Author(s) -
Jan van der Ploeg,
DanteM Aquino,
Tessa Minter,
M. van Weerd
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
conservation and society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.04
H-Index - 35
eISSN - 0975-3133
pISSN - 0972-4923
DOI - 10.4103/0972-4923.186336
Subject(s) - devolution (biology) , natural resource , natural resource management , land tenure , customary land , state (computer science) , environmental planning , land management , resource (disambiguation) , natural resource economics , environmental resource management , land use , political science , business , geography , economics , agriculture , ecology , law , archaeology , algorithm , computer science , biology , human evolution , computer network
The legalisation of the customary land rights of rural communities is currently actively promoted as a strategy for conserving biodiversity. There is, however, little empirical information on the conservation outcomes of these tenure reforms. In this paper, we describe four conservation projects that specifically aimed to formalise land rights in the Philippines, a country widely seen as a model for the devolution of control over natural resources to rural communities. We demonstrate that these legalistic interventions are based on flawed assumptions, on: 1) the capacity of the state to enforce tenure; 2) the characteristics of customary land rights; and 3) the causal links between legal entitlements and sustainable natural resource management. As a result, these state-led tenure reforms actually aggravate tenure insecurity on the ground, and ultimately fail to improve natural resource management

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