This article compares and contrasts communal and individual properties to examine the relationship between state efforts to formalize property rights and tenure security. The article draws on a study of four landscape mosaics in the Peruvian and Ecuadoran Amazon, selected to represent dynamic forest frontiers. Though Hernando de Soto and other theorists from the property rights school emphasize private individual behavior and land allocation in many collective communities, this research also found collective behavior and land allocation in many individualized communities. The importance of the collective and social relations for both types of properties was particularly salient in the sources of tenure security identified. Though title was one important source, this was insufficient, and often formalization was found to be impermanent. Both groups also emphasized social networks and community relations, on the one hand, and demonstrated use, which further establishes the legitimacy of claims with neighbors, on the other.
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DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1080/08941920.2015.1014609Altmetric score:
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- PRO-FORMAL: Policy and regulatory options to recognise and better integrate the domestic timber sector in tropical countries
- Securing Tenure Rights for Forest-Dependent Communities: a global comparative study of design and implementation of tenure reform
Source
Society and Natural Resources 28(5): 496-512
Publication year
2015
ISSN
0894-1920
Authors
Geographic
Ecuador, Peru
Topic
Research was conducted by project
Funded by
Geographic
Ecuador, Peru
Project Leader
D. Andrew Wardell
Principal Scientist
Anne Larson
Team Leader, Equal Opportunities, Gender Justice & Tenure