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Justice innovation in Iraq:Introducing the justice innovation component to the LAND-at-scale activities in Iraq

28 Février 2024
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The Hague Institute for Innovation of Law (HIIL) and the Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO) are delighted to announce a new collaboration for complementary LAND-at-scale activities in Iraq. Activities focus on justice innovation and support: by scouting, vetting, selecting and supporting promising local and existing justice initiatives in Northern Iraq, HIIL aims to strengthen the localization of justice solutions for Iraqi people.

Land registration and the local social contract

06 Mars 2023
Wytske Chamberlain - van der Werf

During the Annual Conference hosted by the Knowledge Platform Security and Rule of Law (KPSRL), the LAND-at-scale knowledge management organised a session exploring how land registration might impact relations between local governments and the populations they are expected to serve. Land registration interventions today often follow a path of decentralisation in which local land offices are tasked with additional responsibilities, or new entities are being created. These local offices give local authorities an important role in land mapping, registration, administration and adjudication.

La loi RERA peut contribuer à réduire les litiges en matière de propriété en améliorant les dossiers de titres de propriété

29 Novembre 2022
Deepak Sanan

Les tribunaux civils de l'Inde seraient engorgés par les litiges liés à la propriété. Deux estimations à ce sujet mentionnent un chiffre de deux tiers de toutes les affaires et de quatre-vingts pour cent de toutes les affaires ! On estime qu'une grande partie d'entre eux sont causés par le manque de transparence des transactions et l'absence de bons dossiers de titres de propriété. 

Call for Papers: Building Power, Deepening Democracy: Global Perspectives on Environmental Justice

25 Août 2021
Seraphin Muramira

Submission Deadline: All manuscripts should be submitted for consideration by December 31, 2021.

The global environmental crisis is intertwined with the crisis of social and economic inequality. From coal plants to palm oil plantations, economic activities that threaten the planet are concentrated in communities with less power and wealth. “You can’t have climate change without sacrifice zones,” writes Hop Hopkins, “and you can’t have sacrifice zones without disposable people.”1