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Title Country frameworks for development displacement and resettlement : reducing risk, building resilience / edited by Susanna Price and Jane Singer
Published Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019
©2019

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Description 1 online resource (xvi, 300 pages) : illustration, map
Series Routledge studies in development, mobilities and migration
Routledge studies in development, mobilities, and migration.
Contents Why national law is essential for protecting public interest and providing safeguards in land acquisition and forced displacement / Ruwani Jayewardene -- Global monitoring of the human impacts of development-forced displacement and resettlement / Nadine Walicki -- Can national and international legal frameworks mitigate land grabbing and dispossession in South-East Asia? / Andreas Neef -- Minding the gender gaps : how legal gaps withhold gender-equitable outcomes in land acquisition, compensation, and resettlement / Celine Salcedo La Vina -- Higher risk, higher reward? : negotiated settlements, wellbeing and livelihoods in development displacement / Susanna Price and Nicholas Tagliarino -- What does it take to mandate good national policy into law? : the case of Sri Lanka's national involuntary resettlement policy / Sam Pillai -- Assessing country safeguards as a protection/benefit for those who are displaced by development projects : the case of democratic South Africa / Chris De Wet -- Safeguarding community livelihoods in Uganda : analysis of a country framework for land acquisition, resettlement and rehabilitation / Russell Rhoads and Onesmus Mugyenyi -- Indigenous people, involuntary resettlement, international institutions / Nahmad Salamon Sitton -- Paying resettled communities for environmental services : legally mandated benefit-sharing for Vietnam's dam displaced / Jane Singer -- Global or local safeguards? : social impact assessment insights from an urban Indian land acquisition / Asmita Kabra and Budhaditya Das -- Urbanisation resettlement in China : characteristics, risks and the revised land administration law / Duan Yuefang, Brooke Wilmsen and Zhao Xu -- Land rights on paper and in practice in Cambodia : how land rights are recognised, protected and expropriated for project development / Sophorn Sek -- Cultural and political obstacles to effective resettlement : a case study of involuntary displacement of pehuenche families by the Pangue and Ralco hydroelectric dams in southern Chile / Jeanne W. Simon and Claudio Gonzales Parra -- With or without international institutions? : acquisition of land rights for infrastructure projects in the weak legal framework of Timor-Leste / Bernardo Almeida
Summary The problem of escalating population displacement demands global attention and country co-ordination. This book investigates the particular issue of development-induced displacement, whereby land is seized or restricted by the state for the purposes of development projects. Those displaced by these schemes often risk losses to theirhomes, livelihoods, food security, and socio-cultural support;for which theyare rarely fully compensated. Bringing together 22 specialist researchers and practitioners from across the globe, this book provides a much-needed independent analysis of country frameworks for development-induced displacement spanning Asia, Africa, Central and South America. As global competition for land increases, public and private sector lenders are lightening their social safeguards, shifting the oversight for protecting the displaced to national law and regulations. This raises a central question: Do countries have effective ways of addressing the risks and lost opportunities for their people who are displaced? While many countries remain impervious to the problem, the book also shines a light on the few who are pioneering new legislation and strategies, intended to address questions such as: should the social costs to those displaced help determine whether a project meets the public interest and merits financing? Does the modern state need powers of eminent domain? How can country laws, systems, institutions and negotiations be reformed to protect citizens better against disempowering public and private sector development displacement? This book will interest those working on forced and voluntary migration, property and expropriation law, human rights, environmental and social impact assessment, internal and refugee displacement from conflicts, environment change, disasters and development
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Susanna Price is a Lecturer in the College of Asia and the Pacific at the Australian National University (ANU) Jane Singer is an Associate Professor in the Graduate School of Global Environmental Studies at Kyoto University, Japan
Restricted: Printing from this resource is governed by The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK) and UK copyright law currently in force. WlAbNL
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on June 05, 2020)
Subject Internally displaced persons -- Government policy -- Case studies
Internally displaced persons -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- Case studies
Economic development projects -- Social aspects -- Case studies
Forced migration -- Case studies
Eminent domain -- Case studies
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Public Policy -- Social Security.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Public Policy -- Social Services & Welfare.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Third World Development.
Economic development projects -- Social aspects
Eminent domain
Forced migration
Genre/Form Case studies
Form Electronic book
Author Price, Susanna (Social development specialist), editor.
Singer, Jane (Professor of environmental education), editor.
LC no. 2019008845
ISBN 9781351031820
1351031821
9781351031806
1351031805
9781351031813
1351031813
9781351031790
1351031791