Lea / Curtin | Land Law and Economic Development in Papua New Guinea | Buch | 978-1-4438-2651-8 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 220 Seiten

Lea / Curtin

Land Law and Economic Development in Papua New Guinea


1. Auflage 2011
ISBN: 978-1-4438-2651-8
Verlag: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Buch, Englisch, 220 Seiten

ISBN: 978-1-4438-2651-8
Verlag: Cambridge Scholars Publishing


This book is devoted to an analysis of alternative land tenure systems in Papua New Guinea and offers a blend of philosophical, legal, sociological and economic approaches to this issue. The text is divided roughly into two sections. The first six chapters provide a religious, philosophical, historical, sociological and legal context in which to understand Melanesian culture and Melanesian customary land tenure, and its contemporary recognition within the country’s legal system. The early chapters review the historical approaches to customary land tenure from the pre-independence period up to and including the most recent amendments that deal with the incorporation of customary land owning groups. In these chapters we recommend that the present system be replaced with one that gives greater emphasis to formalized forms of private individual ownership and provides answers to various cultural, social and philosophical objections to such proposals.

The latter section of the book demonstrates the economic advantages to be gained through the conversion of customary forms of individual land tenure to private ownership based on documented titling. The economic issues considered include the serious shortage of land for other than purely subsistence food production; the inadequacy of both food and cash crop production for export when based on customary land ownership; and the failure of the new Forestry Act to promote increased levels of sustainable production by Papua New Guineans themselves. The book concludes with examination of the scope for land registration in Papua New Guinea with reference to developments in Kenya that transformed customary ownership across much of the country into individual private ownership, and, in the Appendix, to the impact of the reversion from titled to customary land ownership across most of Zimbabwe after 2000.
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Tim Curtin was born in India in 1937. He was brought up and schooled in South Africa (1938–1955). He completed his first degree at the then University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, and obtained his MSc Econ at the London School of Economics (1961–63). He lectured in economics at UCRN 1964–1966, and at the University of York (UK) 1966–1970. He then became an economic adviser variously in Tanzania, Kenya, London, Egypt, Nigeria, and Papua New Guinea (1970–1999). He is now retired and living in Canberra, Australia. His previous publications are listed at his website: www.timcurtin.com.

David Lea was born in London England in 1946. He studied at the College of the Holy Cross, McGill University and the University of Ottawa from which he holds a PhD in Philosophy and a LLB. He currently teaches philosophy at the American University of Sharjah. His principal interests are in applied philosophy and he has published in journals such as the Business Ethics Quarterly and the Journal of Applied Philosophy. David Lea previously taught at the University of Papua New Guinea and has written extensively on social issues in Papua New Guinea with a focus on Melanesian land Tenure. Many of his publications appear in the Pacific Economic Bulletin.


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