land administration regional workshop ghana, malawi, south-africa and tanzania may 12 – 15, 2008

21
LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

Upload: gerald-greene

Post on 19-Jan-2016

216 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP

GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA

AND TANZANIA

MAY 12 – 15, 2008

Page 2: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

TOPIC:

CUSTOMARY LAND SECRETARIATS AS LOCAL STRUCTURES FOR EFFECTIVE RURAL LAND ADMINISTRATION IN GHANA

PRESENTED BY

MARK KAKRABA-AMPEHNATIONAL FACILITATOR

CUSTOMARY LAND ADMINISTARTIONLAND ADMINIOSTRATION PROJECT - GHANA

Page 3: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION Background

Strengthening Customary Land Administration CLS and their Functions Land Management Committees and their

Functions Progress in Establishment of CLS Improvements made so far Challenges Lessons Conclusion

Page 4: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

BACKGROUND Rural Land Administration in Ghana is governed by

Customary practices and Enacted Laws

About 80% of lands in Ghana are Customary lands under stools/skins, families, clans, community heads

About 60% of Ghana is rural

Customary Land Administration characterized by paucity of records on rights and interests of groups and individuals be they inherent or derivative

Page 5: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

BACKGROUND CONT’D

Most land transactions are oral Laws on land registration not successful in

capturing such oral grants and inherent rights and interests e.g.

۩Land Registry Act, 1962 (Act 122)

۩Conveyancing Decree, 1973 (NRCD 175)

۩Land Title Registration Law, 1986 (PNDCL 152) Contribution to conflict and litigation, fraud

and general indiscipline in the land market

Page 6: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

STRENGTHENING CUSTOMARY LAND ADMINISTRATION Customary Land Administration reform under the Land Administration Project : Project Component 2.3

“supporting the development of Customary Land Secretariats (CLS) in Ghana, as effective, accountable local structures for administration of land with particular attention to be paid to strengthening the capacity of CLS to address the needs of diverse populations within their communities, and recognize the great range of customary tenure systems in different regions of the country”

Page 7: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

Expected Outputs of the reform: 1. Institutions:

CLS established and strengthened in pilot areas in partnership with government and land sector agencies

2. Information:

Improved quality of records and accessibility of information at local level on

land use and holdings land transactions and availability, and associated financial and cadastral records

3. Accountability:

Improved traditional/customary level accountability,

4. Policy development better informed.

Page 8: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

CLS & THEIR FUNCTIONS Customary Land Secretariats are decentralised land

administration units established and owned by land owning communities

Functions: Keeping and maintaining accurate and up to date

land records. Provision of information about the land owning

community to the public. Provision of land information to the public –

ownership, rights, use, availability, etc.

Page 9: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

CLS Functions Cont’d Keeping records of all fees and charges associated

with land grants. Liaising with Town Development Committees to

ensure that development conforms to planning schemes.

Receiving all correspondence on behalf of the Land Management Committee.

Serve as the link between the land owning community and the public sector land agencies, District/Municipal/Metropolitan Assemblies, Environmental Protection Agency, etc.

Page 10: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

CLS Functions Cont’d

Serving as the link between an applicant and the Land Management Committee.

Preparing accounts of all income and expenditure.

Preparing periodic reports on all activities of the Secretariat.

Promote ADR and keep records on land related disputes settled at the local level through ADR.

Page 11: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

LAND MANAGEMENT COMMITTEES & THEIR FUNCTIONS Land Management Committees

Functions: Exercising general oversight responsibility over

the operations of the CLS Offer policy direction to the CLS Hire all categories of staff of the CLS Determine salaries and allowances for CLS staff. Provide the CLS with details of all persons with

capacity to execute instruments affecting land within the CLS area

Page 12: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

Functions Cont’d

Offer guidelines for determination of ‘drink money’ and ground rent.

Review performance of the CLS and determine new direction for effectiveness and growth.

Resolve land related disputes through ADR Perform any other functions to be

determined from time to time by the customary land owning group

Page 13: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

PROGRESS IN THE ESTABLISHMENT OF CLS

Supply Led Approach

Change to Demand-Led Approach 10 Established/Strengthened 10 New to be established in May 2008

(Refer to Map for location of CLS)

Page 14: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008
Page 15: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

IMPROVEMENTS IN CUSTOMARY LAND ADMINISTRATION (a) Recording of Land Transaction. –

Over 8,000 recorded so far

(b) Enumeration of properties and recovery of land records

(c) Promoting Alternative Dispute Resolution

Page 16: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

IMPROVEMENTS IN CUSTOMARY LAND ADMINISTRATION CONT’D (d) Harnessing Economic potential

through sound land management practices

(e) Interface developed between land registration agencies and the CLS

(f) The duplication of the land records of the public sector land agencies for the CLS

Page 17: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

CHALLENGES

Ensuring Sustainability

Financial Sustainability

Technical Sustainability

Page 18: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

Financial Sustainability

Identifying sources of revenue to meet all CLS running cost

Developing Capacity of CLS staff to harness identified revenue sources

Developing partnership with land users for support

Page 19: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

Technical Sustainability

Personnel with requisite skills

Types and records to be kept

Record management practices

Level of Technology

Page 20: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

LESSONS LEARNT Top-down approach to the

establishment/strengthening CLS is not the best as it fails to win commitment and ownership of the customary land owners.

Given the right orientation and training, CLS could resolve land disputes at the local level and substantially reduce the number of land cases that come before the formal courts.

With the appropriate training and support, CLS could manage land records and use such records to improve land revenue.

Page 21: LAND ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL WORKSHOP GHANA, MALAWI, SOUTH-AFRICA AND TANZANIA MAY 12 – 15, 2008

CONCLUSION

THANK YOU