Land administration for food security: A research synthesis

被引:29
|
作者
Rockson, Georgina [1 ]
Bennett, Rohan [1 ]
Groenendijk, Liza [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Twente, UNU Sch Land Adm Studies, ITC Fac, NL-7500 AE Enschede, Netherlands
关键词
Land administration; Food security; Research synthesis;
D O I
10.1016/j.landusepol.2012.11.005
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Food security remains an ongoing global concern: the challenge of ensuring food availability, access, and utility for all, at all times, is yet to be met. The body of literature relating to food security is growing immensely. Land administrators are part of the discourse. Their arguments are spread disparately across academic and professional publications. The distinction between scientific work and political rhetoric is increasingly blurry: the role of land administration needs to be more concisely articulated. This paper provides a new synthesis on the relationships between land administration and food security. It undertakes a review of land administration literature relating to food security. It aims at crystallizing understandings of how land administration supports, or fails to support, food security at a conceptual level, and also the strategic and operational levels of land administration systems. The relationship between land administration and food security appears to be conceptually agreed upon; however, at operational levels the link is less evident. Conceptually, land administration is argued to deliver (and sometimes not deliver) secure land tenure, support for implementation of agricultural policies, access to credit, less litigation, easier land dealings, land taxation, land inventories, and land transaction controls. This enables (or undermines) subsistence farming, development of local agricultural sectors and markets, credit to access to non-local food markets, farm subsidization, more efficient land utilization, fairer international investments, and national food planning strategies. In general, the examined literature tends to focus on problem identification rather than system design. Additionally, the large amount of positive viewpoints need better validation in many cases. Future work needs to concentrate on examining the utility of land information and geospatial tools for food security, extracting lessons from the land administration systems of developed contexts, and improving the links at an operational level. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:337 / 342
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Land and food security
    Aiora Zabala
    Nature Sustainability, 2018, 1 : 335 - 335
  • [2] Land and food security
    Zabala, Aiora
    NATURE SUSTAINABILITY, 2018, 1 (07): : 335 - 335
  • [3] Research on Farmers' Willingness of Land Transfer Behavior Based on Food Security
    Wang, Haizi
    Li, Chaowei
    Liu, Juan
    Zhang, Shibin
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2019, 11 (08):
  • [4] Land, Gender, and Food Security
    Doss, Cheryl
    Summerfield, Gale
    Tsikata, Dzodzi
    FEMINIST ECONOMICS, 2014, 20 (01) : 1 - 23
  • [5] Food security, land use and land surveyors
    van der Molen, P.
    SURVEY REVIEW, 2017, 49 (353) : 147 - 152
  • [6] Land quality and food security in Asia
    Beinroth, FH
    Eswaran, H
    Reich, PF
    RESPONSE TO LAND DEGRADATION, 2001, : 83 - 97
  • [7] RESEARCH IN FOOD ADMINISTRATION
    DONALDSON, B
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN DIETETIC ASSOCIATION, 1961, 38 (05) : 444 - &
  • [8] Land tenure reforms, tenure security and food security in poor agrarian economies: Causal linkages and research gaps
    Holden, Stein T.
    Ghebru, Hosaena
    GLOBAL FOOD SECURITY-AGRICULTURE POLICY ECONOMICS AND ENVIRONMENT, 2016, 10 : 21 - 28
  • [9] Land quality, land degradation, and food security in developing countries
    Rosen, S
    Shapouri, S
    LAND QUALITY, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY, AND FOOD SECURITY: BIOPHYSICAL PROCESSES AND ECONOMIC CHOICES AT LOCAL, REGIONAL, AND GLOBAL LEVELS, 2003, : 355 - 369
  • [10] Land cover, land use, climate change and food security
    Yakubu Aliyu Bununu
    Ashiru Bello
    Adamu Ahmed
    Sustainable Earth Reviews, 6 (1):