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CGIAR innovation joint village land use planning making policy gains
Thursday, 2024/09/26 | 08:41:01

CGIAR News; 24/9/2024

 

Policy enactment in the Tanzania land sector with endorsement and uptake of CGIAR innovation joint village land-use planning by Ministry of Lands, Housing and Human Settlements Development and incorporation into national land use planning guidelines.

  

Joint village land use planning responds to the need for cross-border planning and sharing of collective land uses such as rangelands, forests and conservation areas that do not conveniently fall within administrative boundaries. In Tanzania, this is recognized by enabling policy and legislation that states, that a village planning authority ”…in respect of resources shared with other villages, prepare jointly with other villages planning authorities a village resource management sector plan,”  (Land Use Planning Act 2007, Section 33 (1)). 

 

ILRI and local partners KINNAPA Development Association, Tanzania Natural Resources Forum and the National Land Use Planning Commission have been developing and piloting a joint village land use planning approach over the last eight years, at first working through a project of the International Land Coalition and IFAD (the Sustainable Rangeland Management Project) and then through the CGIAR CRPs. Current support is provided through the CGIAR Research Initiative on Livestock and Climate, which focuses on strengthening the approach through gender and social equity initiatives, making it more cost-effective and influencing the policy environment and building capacities for scaling. 

 

Today, joint village land use planning is being implemented across more than 200,000 hectares of grazing land and benefiting hundreds of thousands more hectares under other land uses incorporated into the broader land use planning process. It has also triggered the issuing of collectively held Certificates of Customary Rights of Occupancy provided to livestock keeper associations. This has provided them with vital tenure security and the legal backing to prevent or evict farmer and other encroachments into their lands, whilst strengthening incentives for improving and restoring the land. 

 

To move to scaling, more visible support from the national government was needed. In response, ILRI and partners have been working with the National Land Use Planning Commission to develop national guidelines on joint village land use planning and incorporating a summary of the approach into the main participatory village land use planning guidelines. A series of validation workshops were held in early 2024.

 

See https://www.cgiar.org/news-events/news/cgiar-innovation-joint-village-land-use-planning-making-policy-gains/

 

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