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    | Article of the Month - 
	  March 2007 |  Corruption and Land Administraton
Paul VAN DER MOLEN and Arbind TULADHAR, the Netherlands      
       This article in .pdf-format. SUMMARY The paper 
	addresses corruption in land administration and land management. Based on 
	information that is published in the free press, the conclusion is drawn 
	that all distinguished forms of corruption occur (abuse of discretion for 
	personal gain, for others against payment, for family or party members 
	etc.). The extension and characteristics cannot be estimated because of the 
	hidden nature of corruption. Then the paper pays attention to possible 
	measures how to curb corruption.   1. INTRODUCTION This paper addresses corruption in land administration.  Although there is not a universally agreed definition of corruption, 
	UN/Habitat defines corruption as 'the misuse of office for private gain' 
	(UN/Habitat, 2004). Some common forms of corruption are  
		Bribery (’abuse of discretion in favour of a third party in exchange 
		of benefits given by the third party’)Fraud (’abuse of discretion for private gain without third parties 
		involvement’)Favouritism, Nepotism and Clientelism (’abuse of discretion not for 
		self-interest but for the interest of family, clan, political party, 
		ethnic group etc. (based on UN/Habitat, 2004) Corruption has the most devastating effects in developing countries 
	because it hinders any advance in economic growth and democracy (UNDP, 1998)
	 ‘Land administration is the process of determining, recording, and 
	disseminating information about ownership, value and use of land; when 
	implementing land management policies’ (UN/ECE 1996). As land administration 
	is strongly related with land management (the rationale for land 
	administration is to facilitate land management), in this paper both land 
	administration and land management issues are addressed.  Access to land and land related benefits is an important factor to reduce 
	poverty and create economic growth (WB, 2003)  ‘Abuse of discretion’ might easily apply to the land issue, as the 
	administration and management of land belongs to the domain of government 
	authority (although cooperation with private sector and civil parties is 
	common). Formal decisions are necessary to register a property, to grant a 
	mortgage, to impose or lift restrictions and to allocate a certain land use, 
	which implies discretionary powers of the public sector.  ‘Nepotism, Favouritism and Clientelism’ might easily apply to the land 
	issue, as access to land in many situations is dependent kinship, especially 
	under customary law.By consequence, in a world where corruption is getting more and more an 
	issue (see e.g. UN. Habitat 2004),( Törhönen, 2006) (OECD 2000),(UNU, 2005), 
	paying attention to corruption in the field of land administration and land 
	management is inevitable.
 To avoid the impression that corruption is a matter of developing 
	countries only, we commence with a brief Chapter 2 about our own country, 
	the Netherlands, although the land issue seems not to be a dominant element 
	here. Then we report on desk research to the occurrence of corruption world 
	wide. No selection was done in advance: we searched the web for free press 
	and free publications. Although it is said that corruption is hidden, we 
	were amazed by how much openness existed about misbehaviour regarding land 
	administration and land management.  In Chapter 4 we try to analyze and categorize the forms of corruption, 
	while Chapter 5 aims at providing some ideas about how to curb corruption. 
	Chapter 6 gives some conclusions and recommendations 2. CORRUPTION IN A CORRUPTION FREE COUNTRY Almost no country is free from corruption (UNDP, 1998). More than two-thirds of the 159 nations surveyed in Transparency 
	International’s 2005 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) scored less than 5 
	out of a clean score of 10, indicating serious levels of corruption in a 
	majority of the countries surveyed.
 'Despite progress on many fronts, including the imminent entry into force of 
	the United Nations Convention against Corruption, seventy countries - nearly 
	half of those included in the Index - scored less than 3 on the CPI, 
	indicating a severe corruption problem, says the Index (TI, 2005d)
 Regarding the Netherlands -by many people considered as a corruption-free 
	country (CSR, 2001)- the rate in the CPI is as follows:  CPI 2001 the Netherlands: rate 8CPI 2002 the Netherlands: rate 7
 CPI 2003 the Netherlands: rate 7
 CPI 2004 the Netherlands: rate 10
 CPI 2005 the Netherlands: rate 11
 With an national integrity system that almost meets all guidelines of 
	Transparency International (CSR 2001), an investigation of the Free 
	University of Amsterdam for the Ministry of Justice (Huberts & Nelen, 2005), 
	reveals as follows:  
		in the public sector there are a limited number of criminal cases 
		each year, namely 50 cases resulting in 27 convictions, 78 persons 
		imprisonedwithin the whole public sector 130 internal investigations are 
		conducted each year (61 municipalities and 43 national ministries, rest 
		other bodies)the bulk of investigations regards purchases and subsidies, only a 
		few cases of land transactions and housing are reporteda survey among 341 representatives of public organisations shows 
		that they perceive 3,2% of all civil servants to be corrupt, and 5,2% of 
		politicians.0,5 % of Dutch respondents perceive being confronted by corruption 
		by civil servants These two last conclusions were challenged by an investigation by an 
	opinion poll bureau, that found that 800 citizen-respondents perceive that 
	civil servants and politicians are respectively 3 and 5 times higher than 
	that of the University reports (Elsevier, 2006)  The 2005 Annual Social Report of the Dutch Central Government reports 
	that the number of civil servants in ministries which are guilty or 
	suspected of corruption is doubled from 59 in 2004 to 136 in 2005 (NRC, 
	2006)  The investigations mentioned above don't indicate an important role of 
	the land sector in corruption. However, making regarding corruption in the 
	form of fraud (use of knowledge for private gain, without necessary 
	involvement of third parties) (Huberts & Neelen 2005), there is general 
	concern about fraud in the real estate market. It is said that this market 
	has to contend with a worsening image, caused by long drawn-out affairs in 
	the realm of the national building- and construction fraud, and a series of 
	liquidations in the criminal circuit regarding real estate transactions. 
	These factors harm the overall picture of the estate market in such a way, 
	that there are suggestions to create a 'supervising authority for the real 
	estate market' with the power to spot suspected transactions, and bring 
	these to the knowledge of the public prosecutor (Eichholz, 2006).  3. LAND AND CORRUPTION: RESULTS OF A BRIEF DESK RESEARCHDesk research (including internet-search during March and April 2006) 
	reveals that land management and land administration are not free from 
	corruption. Of course our observations cannot include an estimation about 
	the extent and nature of corruption regarding land, as the nature of 
	corruption is that it takes place in a hidden way. We report about the cases 
	which are documented and reported in free press and publications.  A household study in Bangladesh (TI, 2005a) under 3000 households shows 
	that 97% households that bought land had to pay bribes for land 
	registration, 85% of the households who mutated their land ownership had to 
	pay bribes for land mutation, 85% households who collected land related 
	documents had to pay bribes, 83% households had to pay bribes for land 
	survey, and 40% households who received land had to pay bribes.  The India Corruption Study (TI, 2005b) states that 79% of those 
	interacting with the Land Administration Department in the country had 
	agreed that there is corruption in the department. Only 5% of respondents 
	felt that there is no corruption in the department. Of those who paid 
	bribes, more than 36% had paid money to department officials, whereas 33% 
	had paid money to middlemen like document writers, property dealers etc. to 
	get their work done. Work for which bribes were paid, concerned 39% property 
	registration, 25% mutation, 12% land survey and 4% obtaining property 
	documents.  A household survey in Nepal (TU 2003) concludes that the respondents 
	perceived land administration as the most corrupt sector, followed by the 
	custom department, police and judiciary. 6,6% of those who were taking 
	service from the land administration sector during 2002 pointed out that 
	they had faced corruption. Tehsilders (revenue officers) were found to be 
	the main actors of corruption in land administration, followed by land 
	surveyors.  In Pakistan (TI 2002b), 133 out of 1724 respondents recalled contacting 
	the land administration department and faced corruption. Main reasons to 
	contact the department were transfer of property (25%0, buying land (24% and 
	selling land (17%). Surveyors and tehsilders (revenue officers) appeared o 
	be the most involved.A land revenue officer in Pakistan was accused to have misused his official 
	position and accumulating personal assets instead of facilitating land 
	transactions amongst members of the civil society. He got 5 years prison. 
	(Shahna, 2002)
 A magistrate in Pakistan reported to be concerned that valuable state 
	property under the control of city council, was being used to the advantage 
	of the property grabbing mafia, while the city council getting a cut of its 
	ill-gotten gains (Daily Times, 2002)
 Investigations demonstrate that the land administration sector is in the 
	top three sectors prone to corruption in Bangladesh (rank 3), India (rank 
	3), Pakistan (rank 1), and Sri Lanka (rank 3).(TI, 2002c)  In Lithuania (UNDP, 2004) 34% of the residents believe land use planning 
	divisions are amongst the very corrupt institutions.  The Kenya Bribery Index 2001 and 2002 ranked the Ministry of Lands and 
	Settlement 4th and 13th..(TI, 2001a,2002a)The Kenya Bribery Index 2005 (TI 2005c), shows that 65,7% of the people 
	visiting the Ministry of Lands might be asked for a bribe, 36,3% of 
	declinations resulted in service denial.
 The Minster of Lands and Settlements of Kenya says that since 
	independence land has been used as a pay-back system for political 
	supporters, though limited to certain groups of people. Also he observes 
	that the state has large chunks of land for development and research that 
	were irregularly subdivided and sold. The coordinator of the Kenya Land 
	Alliance reports that all land registries, land boards, the land rent 
	collecting offices and the central registry in Nairobi are very prone to 
	corruption. Equally prone to corruption are the offices of the provincial 
	administration because they are in charge of the executive administration of 
	land within their administrative areas. Others include the survey offices, 
	and the land tribunal offices right from the chief, district officer to 
	heads of municipalities. All services offered in these offices are highly 
	prone to corruption, he said Also the management of trust lands, land which 
	is under the county council for the purpose of nomadic lifestyle and where 
	some leaders have grabbed lands on the river banks, is prone to corruption, 
	he said. (Adili, 2003) Schools and other bodies that had their land grabbed, now have the 
	Governments permission to seize it back, even if they have to use force to 
	do so, and not waiting for the Land Tribunal (Daily Nation, 2005a) although 
	this order to seizure land without seeking court orders attracted angry 
	reactions such as from the Law Society of Kenya and the Catholic Church: 
	'the government should not act as a gangster and not respect the rule of 
	law…' (Daily Nation, 2005b).
 Mwathane writes about a syndicate that prepares parallel titles for 
	registered and unregistered parcels: ‘approval letters could be designed, 
	survey records simulated, deed plan prepared, and title issued outside the 
	Government system. He presumed a heavy hand of insiders collaboration at 
	work (Daily Nation, 2006)  Business men and politicians related to the Goldenberg corruption case 
	were active in fraud cases with irregular transactions with real estate and 
	hotels in Nairobi (NRC, 2006a)September 2005 president Kibaki from Kenya decided illegally to downgrade 
	Amboseli National Park from a park to a reserve and give it back to the 
	Masaai, in an attempt to buy votes for the new constitution (NG 2006).
 Fr Gabriel Donan and three human rights activists were released from 
	Kenyan police custody. The four were protesting against land grabbing. The 
	Government has subsequently agreed to investigate how the land in question 
	was allocated to senior government officials. (Catholic, 2003)  A prominent cabinet minister has accused certain government officials of 
	facilitating the illicit titling of 4,000 acres of land in the Masaai Mara 
	Game Reserve in southwest Kenya. The minister told the press that Ministry 
	of Lands officials were stealing the land that belonged to the Masaai. 
	(Weekly, 2002)  The Ndungu Report (December 2004) gives full and detailed overview about 
	land and graft in Kenya. It talks about ‘unbridled plunder’ of urban, state 
	and ministerial lands, of settlement schemes and trust lands, and of 
	forestlands, national parks, game reserves, wetlands, riparian reserves and 
	protected areas, facilitated by the extensive complexity of professionals 
	(lawyers, surveyors, valuers, land registrars, etc.) (Southall, 2005)  Even the former American embassy was constructed on lands illegally 
	allocated under the track of the Southern By-pass of Nairobi (Mwathane, 
	2004)  The Institute of Surveyors of Kenya recommends re-engineering of land 
	administration processes with the aim of reducing the discretionary 
	authority of officials. Computerized and well administered land information 
	systems would help to ensuring transparency and accountability and cases of 
	missing files, double allocations and delayed transactions would be 
	eliminated. Professionals should be increasingly be reminded their ethical 
	responsibility (Makthimo, 2004)  Bribes to speed up cadastral procedures in the Prague’s land registry 
	urged to a radical change in the management of the office since October 2003 
	(Czech 2003).  The Malaysian minister of Lands Kasitah Gaddam was arrested for misusing 
	his position of chairman of the state lands body to approve the sales of 
	shares it held in plantations, holding 25% of the sales for himself (worth 
	10 million $). (Tapei, 2004)  In January 2003 in Uzbekistan the father of a large family committed 
	suicide, because for years he had been in conflict with the local 
	authorities; they had taken the land he cultivated for years because the 
	relatives of a prosecutor were interested in it. (ISHR, 2003) A recent survey on corruption in Vietnam showed that land management tops 
	the list of ten fields accused of corruption. There are a multitude of land 
	corruption crimes committed, but the three most popular are (1) taking 
	advantage of state projects to appropriate land, share land, especially in 
	forestation, residential areas and resettlement programmes, (2) making 
	corrupt use of power to confer land for example leasing land plots of large 
	areas, favourable positions, low prices, quickly completing related 
	formalities and seeking profit through land conferring, especially for 
	investment purposes, and (3) authoritarian behaviour, asking for presents 
	and money while performing formalities related to land, such as land 
	allocation, land lease, land rights transfer, land use certificate granting, 
	land compensation and site clearance (Vietnam, 2005)
 A reporter for the newspaper Matichon in Pichit in central Thailand was 
	found dead, shot in his car on 10 January (1998), after reportedly agreeing 
	to meet an unknown source. The reporter was known to have been investigating 
	land development corruption, and had reportedly rejected a bribe to halt his 
	reporting (WAN 1998)  Corruption was reported in a Local Aboriginal Land Council in Australia 
	registering false transfers of land in the Land Titles Office (ICAC, 2002)
	 An official in the Land Registry in Dublin (Ireland) has been suspended 
	and is facing 47 corruption charges for allegedly illegally receiving money 
	over a 2,5 year’s period for documents he sold to a Dublin-based law agent 
	(Irish Post, 2006).  In the '80 an employee involved in land registration in the Netherlands 
	(office Amsterdam) was fired and convicted because of discharging mortgages 
	in the land book against payment by land owners/debtors (not documented, 
	personal knowledge)  The Directorate on Corruption and Economic Crime in Botswana is 
	investigating 73 cases of land corruption. The head of the Directorate 
	reported that the Directorate received 238 allegations relating to lands 
	that were allocated illegally, in the last ten years. (MMEGI, 2004)  A special rapporteur of UN on housing rights visiting Cambodia reports 
	main concerns about significant land grabbing which appears to be 
	exacerbating land disputes and skewed land ownership patterns to the 
	disadvantage of both the rural and urban poor; the land management system in 
	place has been unable to address this situation as a combined result of (1) 
	the absence of land records, (2) an underdeveloped and non-transparent land 
	registration system, (3) the absence of cadastral index maps, (4) inadequate 
	land laws and procedures, and (5) unclear delineation of state land and (6) 
	the weakness of the justice system. Furthermore the rapporteur observed a 
	considerable number of forced evictions cases often with violence, a growing 
	number of evictions ordered by courts without sufficient investigation 
	concerning the legality and legitimacy of the relevant land titles, and a 
	great number of land ‘swaps’ taking place all over the country, which 
	transactions may be illegal and have been carried out with lack of 
	transparency and public participation (UN, 2005) Insecurity of tenure contributed to land grabbing, often by soldiers or 
	companies with connections to local officials. Legal Aid of Cambodia 
	represented more than 8 thousand families, or about 43 thousand people, in 
	land cases most of which involved military and local officials. In a 
	significant case that was first brought to court in March 2001, indigenous 
	villagers in Ratanakiri province launched a legal appeal against a military 
	general who fraudulently obtained title to their ancestral lands, putting 
	some 9 hundred villagers at the risk of landlessness (UNCHR, 2003)
 President Kikwete (Tanzania) said that he would sack officers if 
	discovered that they allocated land to more than one person. Speaking when 
	he visited the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources, the names of the 
	officers who double allocated the land would be forwarded to the Prevention 
	of Corruption Bureau for legal action (Guardian, 2006a).  In Georgia, 0.5% of all corruption regards the registration of property 
	ownership (WDI, 1999).  In Russia it is estimated that annually 36 billion $ is paid for bribes, 
	of which 11 billion to government officials to acquire permits (NRC, 2002)
	 One of the slogans in the first anti-corruption campaign in Mozambique 
	was ‘don’t pay high administration costs asked for by land officers for the 
	registration of land property’ (IS 2004)  In Ghana, struggle for land and the role of the chiefs is related. 
	Although according to customary law the chief should administer the land in 
	the interest of the community, in approximately 65% of case studies the 
	chief himself is the main beneficiary of land sales, giving rise to much 
	local resistance. (Ubbink, 2004)  China’s Ministry of Lands and Resources announced new measures to crack 
	down on corruption and inefficiency in the land sector. The new rules forbid 
	officials to receive personal benefits form parties under their 
	administration. It is estimated that in 2003 the country faced 168,000 
	violations of its Land Law (China Daily, 2004)Complaints about corruption in the land and mining sector have increased in 
	recent years, which mainly focused on the illegal approval of using farmland 
	for construction and the rights of mining mineral resources at very low 
	price or even free of charge (People’s Daily, 2005).
 A former minister of land and resources was expelled from the Communist 
	Party of China Central Committee and deprived of Party membership on 
	corruption charges. The minister took bribes of about 600,000 $ for misusing 
	his powers (China Daily, 2006).  The Chinese prime minister Wen Jiabao has warned that the rampant seizure 
	of farmlands for development is threatening social stability amid a rising 
	wave of violent protests in the countryside. There are more than 230 
	demonstrations every day. With urbanization growing fast, about 6,7 million 
	hectares of land were converted into roads, factories, and residential 
	areas, creating problems of food self-sufficiency and left millions of 
	farmers homeless. Because the state or village collectives own the land, 
	farmers have only fixed term usage rights and minimal legal protection. When 
	land is seized it is often done without compensation. As there is no 
	independent court system, it is usually impossible to seek legal redress so 
	farmers have little choice but to protest. Disputes over land have emerged 
	alongside –often related- issues of pollution and corruption. The minister 
	said there were 87,000 protests last year (Guardian, 2006b)  Transforming China’s countryside into a model of rural development will 
	require more than rhetoric and billions of dollars. Implacable, deep-seated, 
	corruption lies at the heart of peasants; complaints about local officials 
	who enrich themselves by taking their land and poisoning their environment. 
	More than 40 million farmers have been displaced from their land and the 
	number is increasing by more than 2 million a year. Land-less farmers are 
	now among the poorest people in the country. (Asian Times, 2006) 4. ANALYSIS OF CORRUPTION IN LAND ADMINISTRATIONThe wide variety of forms of corruption appears to exist in the land 
	sector as in any other sector, for example: 
		Bribery (abuse of discretion because of payments by third parties).It appears that registration of property rights, registration of change 
		of title, acquiring land information, cadastral land survey and land use 
		planning are subject of corruption (in Chapter 3 reported from Bangla 
		Desh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Lithuania, Kenya, Czech Republic, Vietnam, 
		Ireland, the Netherlands, Georgia, Russia, Mozambique and China)
Fraud (abuse of discretion for personal gain without third part 
		involvement). It appears that sales of land and dealing in shares of 
		plantations etc. are not free from corruption (in Chapter 3 reported 
		from Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, Australia, Cambodia, Tanzania, Ghana 
		and China) Nepotism, Favouritism, Clientelism (abuse of discretion for benefit 
		of family, friends etc.) . It appears that issuing such property rights 
		to land that belong to others (also the State) is subject of corruption 
		(in Chapter 3 reported from Kenya, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Botswana, 
		Cambodia and China) We are aware that our way of desk research may suggest that the mentioned 
	countries are the only ones dealing with corruption. Of course this is not 
	the case. It is just a matter which reports and cases are published in the 
	free press. Our Chapter 2 aims at making clear that no country is exempted 
	from corruption.Anyhow, is it obvious that the sector of land administration and land 
	management is subject to corruption in all its forms; the exact reach and 
	precise nature are difficult to estimate.
 5. HOW TO CURB LAND CORRUPTION IN LAND ADMINISTRATIONTransparency is widely recognised as a core principle of good governance: 
	transparency means ‘sharing information and acting in an open manner’, ‘it 
	allows stakeholders to gather information that may be critical to uncovering 
	abuses…’ (UN/Habitat 2004). The toolkit developed by UN/Habitat and TI 
	ranges from assessment and monitoring tools, improved access to information 
	and public participation, promotion of ethics, professionalism and 
	integrity, towards increased transparency through institutional reforms. The 
	World Ethics Forum urges for increase of emphasis on ethical leadership and 
	public integrity (UNU, 2006). OECD asks attention for public service as a 
	public trust, for which public service ethics are a prerequisite (OEDC, 
	2000).  A brief summary of recommendations included in many reports and 
	news-items form a sort of long list of options for measures to curb land 
	corruption.  What the Chinese rural population need, is a legal framework that protect 
	their interests. Since there is no law in China that prevents farmland from 
	being taken for e.g. industrial purposes, and also no legal guarantee of 
	fair compensation for farmers, it is far too easy for local officials to 
	grab land and at the same time strike lucrative deals for themselves with 
	developers; the fact that land remains collectively owned in China also 
	works against farmers. Critics say that the real test of the government’s 
	commitment to helping the rural poor lies in Beijing’s willingness to go a 
	step further and allow privatization of farmland. At present farmers can 
	only lease land for 25-30 years (Asian Times, 2006) Also the system of public bidding for the rights of land use and mining 
	should be further improved to make the market more transparent (People’s 
	Daily, 2005)
 
 New measures of the Chinese Ministry of Lands and Resources comprise that 
	land officials must publish specific standards and procedures on the use and 
	rights of pieces of land and mineral resources, under enhanced supervision. 
	The measures also ban officials from designating intermediary agencies –some 
	of which included where even family members- for land and mineral 
	development projects. The right to designate is revoked. (China Daily, 
	2004).
 Names of officers in Tanzania who double allocate land parcels will be 
	forwarded to the Prevention of Corruption Bureau (Guardian, 2006a).  The UN expert on housing rights, visiting Cambodia, recommends (inter 
	alia) (1) the preparation of a land use plan that clearly identifies the 
	different types of state land and the respective authorities in charge of 
	its management, (2) strengthen public participation, (3) strengthen the 
	monitoring of illegal land sales, (4) announcement of a moratorium on land 
	‘swaps’ and land concessions, (5) declare a moratorium on land sales 
	affecting indigenous people, (6) ensure accountability by disclosing a list 
	of all illegal land ‘swaps’ that have or are being negotiated by local 
	authorities, (7) effectively enforce the 2001 Land Law (UN, 2005)  In Vietnam the first thing to do is abolish or amend land related legal 
	documents to cover the gaps that corruptors can use to seek benefit. 
	Supervision should be strengthened, especially inspection and sternly punish 
	violators, policies and laws on land are not competent and have many 
	loopholes, the enforcement of the law is not very strict, the state sets 
	prices much lower than the market price, too loose management of land. ( 
	Vietnam Net Bridge, 2005)  To avoid illegal payments to land officers to provide titles more quickly 
	than the ‘months and years’ it takes in the Prague land registry (Czech 
	republic), it is suggested to create an ‘express handling fee’ the chairman 
	of the Czech Office for Land Survey and Registry states that it would be 
	difficult to direct these fees back to the organization because they would 
	be treated as treasury income and not as income for the office (Czech, 
	2003).  The household survey in Bangladesh recommends (1) better political will, 
	(2) setting up an anti-corruption commission, (3) setting up a special 
	judicial branch, (4) free flow of information, (5) appointment of a sector 
	-wise ombudsman, (6) policy and institutional reforms, (7) social movement 
	against corruption, (8) freely functioning media, (9) inclusion of 
	corruption issue in the curriculum in schools. (TI, 2005a).  The Ndungu Report in Kenya recommends (1) inventory of public lands, (2) 
	computerization of land records, (3) comprehensive land policy, (4) the 
	creation of a Land Title Tribunal in charge with reviewing each and every 
	case of suspected illegal of irregular allocation of land, and (5) embarking 
	upon a process of revocation and rectification of such titles (Southall, 
	2005).Furthermore the Minister of Lands placed a sign ‘corruption free zone’ at 
	the entrance of the ministry, and at all lifts and corridors to enhance 
	awareness amongst officials, there will be better access to services and the 
	cash office will be open over lunch time.
 Also he opened a complaints center. Moreover he urges for harmonization of 
	land related laws, embedded in a new national land policy. Computerization 
	will be introduced to enhance efficiency, for instance in tracking the 
	transaction process. The other thing is access to information and who is in 
	charge of the information. This will reduce bureaucracy and rent seeking 
	opportunities, which cause corruption (Adili, 2003).
 In Mozambique the role of northern donors is considered as promoting 
	corruption, being under pressure to increase aid to meet international 
	targets, proving the viability of neo-liberal agendas, or justifying 
	existing levels of aid to conservative governments, and having to showcase 
	development success stories (Hanlon, 2004).  In Zambia, analysis of the land delivery process lead to numerous (27!) 
	recommendations to curb ‘white collar malpractices’ by redesigning work 
	processes, redefining roles of officials and openness (Mwamza, 2004).  Computerization of land records under the project ‘Bhoomi’ in Karnataka, 
	India, proves to increase efficiency, shorten delay and curb corruption. 
	(New Indian Press, 2001) 
 This is in line with the recommendations of the (TI, 2005b) that suggests 
	(1) use of technology, (2) reducing the role of the ‘deed writer’, (3) 
	re-forming stamp paper, (4) improvement of public dealing, (5) citizen’s 
	charter, (6) independent complaint redressal cell (TI, 2005b). The report 
	describes the situation prior and after ‘Bhoomi’ confirming the above 
	mentioned result of the project.
 
 Based on the India Corruption Survey 2005, the Centre for Media Studies 
	recommends inter alia (1) simplify the procedures, (2) create user 
	committees, (3) outsource certain services, (4) create transparency through 
	access to information, (5) use of technology, (6) public hearings, (7) 
	separate regulation and service functions, (8) customer satisfaction surveys 
	(Tahiliani, 2005)
 The free media, civil society, and the private sector are necessary 
	partners of a government in curbing corruption (IS, 2001), although the anti 
	corruption TV program ’60 minutes Georgia’ demonstrates that being informed 
	as such does not automatically lead to better governance (IS, 2003)  Utstein recommends anti corruption measures in the land sector comprising 
	(1) integrity pacts, (2) dedicated agencies, (3) holistic approach to 
	tackling corruption, (3a) legal measures, (3b) capacity building, (3c) 
	mobilizing civil society, (3d) mobilizing the private sector (Utstein, 2006)
	 The Corruption in South Asia report 2002 recommends (1) institutionalize 
	user surveys in order to enhance the influence of public feed back to the 
	policy environment, (2) strengthen accountability in order to close the 
	‘accountability vacuum’, (3) set norms and standards in order to make 
	officials accountable for the service delivered, and (4) enhance citizen 
	participation in governance in order to mobilize the role of civil society 
	as a force for improvement of services (TI, 2002c)  If we summarize these scattered ‘real life’ recommendations, the 
	following elements might play a role in curbing corruption in the land 
	sector. 
		Sound legal framework for protection of property rights (reported 
		from China and Kenya) Clear definition of land tenure (reported from China)Enforcement of the law (reported from Vietnam) Open bidding on land (reported from China)Standardized procedures for land dealings and supervision (reported 
		from China Vietnam, Zambia, India and South Africa)Investigations by Anti Corruption Bureau (reported from Tanzania)Preparation of land use plans (reported from Cambodia)Monitoring illegal land sales (reported from Cambodia and Kenya)Disclosure of illegal land swaps (reported from Cambodia and Kenya) 
		Fee structure for services which prevents bribery (reported from 
		Czech Republic) Free flow of information (reported from Bangladesh, Kenya and 
		Georgia)Corruption issues in school curriculum (reported from Bangladesh)Inventory of public lands (reported from Kenya)Computerization of land record (reported from Kenya and India) Creation Land Titles Tribunal (reported from Kenya) Based on these real life proposals, the Land Administration Guidelines 
	(UN 1996), and the Transparency Toolkit (UN/Habitat 2004) we categorize the 
	potential measures against corruption in the land sector as follows. 
		Creation of inventory of existing land tenure (‘cadastre’):
		no ownership possible without being recorded, to prevent land 
		grabbingOpen access to information about ownership, value and use of land
		open for public inspection, to monitor illegal land saleslimited personal privacy protection, to prevent to hide illegal 
		interests Standardized procedures for determination, recording and 
		dissemination of information
		no change in inventory without source document that justifies the 
		change of titleapplication, deed, other document), to prevent illegal land 
		transactionslimited discretionary competences, to prevent concentration of 
		powersSupervision and possibility of appeal
		independent audits, to monitor illegal operationsworking with witnessesspecial Land Tribunals to avoid normal courts to be clogged upComputerization
		dealing with large amounts of data cannot do withoutgive people direct access to servicesbetter monitoring of progress processes The proposals of TI and UN are very suitable to be met by the land 
	sector, as possession of land is visible to anyone, land cannot be hidden, 
	and making an inventory of land tenure (a 'cadastre') already contributes a 
	lot to openness, transparency and availability of information (the 
	fundamental meaning of the 'old' principles of land registers and cadastres 
	of 'publicity' and 'specialty' has always been the provision of transparency 
	in the land market….). 6. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONSCombating corruption in the land sector, most likely cannot be successful 
	as an isolated action. Is should be part of a national integrity system as 
	proposed by Transparency International (TI, 2001), as various general 
	national anti-corruption measures directly might be applicable at the land 
	sector such as: 
		Complaints and ombudsman officeIndependent audit functionIndependent anti corruption agenciesDisclosure of income and assetsEthics training For the land sector some specific measures might apply 
		Land information should be available (create sort of ‘cadastre’)Guaranteed open access to all information (general interest priority 
		over private interest)Accountable process management (e.g. no change in register or map 
		without a legally valid source document)Land Tribunal (to enhance efficiency judiciary)Computerization otherwise no efficient data-handling REFERENCES 
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		Reserve’, Weekly Indigenous News 20 June 2002 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES Paul van der Molen (56) has a degree in geodesy from Delft University of 
	Technology (NL). He is currently a director of the Netherlands Cadastre, 
	Land Registry and Mapping Agency, responsible for Kadaster International. He 
	is a professor at the International Institute for Geo-information Science 
	and Earth Observation ITC in Enschede (NL). He acts as a chair of FIG 
	Commission 7 and as a director of the FIG International Bureau of Land 
	Records and Cadastre OICRF.  Dr. Arbind Man Tuladhar is assistant professor of Land Administration and 
	Geo-Information Science at the department of Urban and Regional Planning and 
	Geo-Information Management, International Institute for Geo-Information 
	Science and Earth Observation (ITC), the Netherlands. His current research 
	interests focus on land tenure, land management/ administration, cadastral 
	systems, system modelling and development including 3D modelling, and 
	spatial data infrastructure. CONTACTSPaul van der MolenHead of Kadaster International
 Cadastre, Land Registry and Mapping Agency
 P.O. Box 9046
 7300 GH Apeldoorn, The Netherlands
 Tel. +31 (055) 528 56 30
 Fax +31 (055) 355 73 62
 http://www.kadaster.nl/international-english/default.html
 
 International Institute for Geoinformation Science and Earth ObservationITC, professor cadastre and land administration, director School for Land 
	Administration Studies
 http://www.itc.nl
 
 International Federation of Surveyors FIGVice President
 http://www.fig.net
 Arbind Man TuladharInternational Institute for Geoinformation Science and Earth Observation
 PO Box 6
 7500 AA Enschede
 NETHERLANDS
 tel. +31-53-4874444
 fax +31-53-4874400
 E-mail: molen@itc.nl
 E-mail: tuladhar@itc.nl
 web: www.itc.nl
 
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