Latest Entries

Bittersweet Harvest: A Human Rights Impact Assessment of the European Union‘s Everything But Arms Initiative in Cambodia

Publication Year: 2013  / Sources: Equitable Cambodia and Inclusive Development International

In Cambodia today, the government is leasing vast quantities of land to private investors to develop large-scale agro-industrial plantations. The leased land often overlaps with the private land of small- scale food producers and the common lands and natural resources that sustain rural communities. Forcibly deprived of their productive base by local and foreign investors backed by state security forces, hundreds of thousands of Cambodians who had pulled themselves out of poverty are once again struggling to survive.

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Land Titling in Cambodia: Formalizing Inequality

Publication Year: 2009  / Sources: Bridges Across Borders Cambodia (BABC)

Illegal land grabbing by powerful actors is unexceptional in Cambodia, where forced evictions and confiscation of land rank among the country’s most pervasive human rights problems. Since 1990 approximately eleven percent of the population of Phnom Penh has been forcibly evicted and relocated to peri-urban resettlement sites that often lack housing, basic infrastructure, and access to public services and and granted as “economic land concessions” to Cambodian and foreign investors without regard for the rights of affected rural and indigenous communities. As a result, these communities have suffered widespread displacement, dispossession of their farming and grazing lands, and reduced access to the forests that sustain their livelihoods.

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Access to Land Title in Cambodia

Publication Year: 2012  / Sources: The NGO Forum on Cambodia

The primary focus of the research was to identify when and how exclusions and other barriers are preventing people from accessing SLR (Systematic Land Registration), and how this is impacting on the broader benefits of the titling system. Here, “exclusion” refers to those who have been excised from adjudication areas prior to or during the process of survey and demarcation, and to those cases where land parcels are left unregistered due to having “unclear status”. The study also sought to gather more detail on the incidence of disputes during the SLR process, and the issue of subsequent registration of land – the process of re-registering titled land when it is transferred to a new owner. This study has drawn on existing research and aims to build on those findings by looking in more detail at how the system is being implemented in practice in four target areas spread across the country.

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A Community Guide to Land Concessions

Publication Year: 2013  / Sources: Equitable Cambodia

This guide is made for Cambodian communities who are affected by ELCs (Economic Land Concessions), or are likely to be affected in the future. It is divided into three parts: ELCs and Communities, ELCs and the Law, and Taking Action. Part One covers the basics of what industrial agriculture and ELCs are, the potential benefits and risks, and the process of Environmental Impact Assessment and public participation. In the Part 2 we discuss the main laws that apply to ELCs in Cambodia, and in Part 3 we look at what communities can do if they are affected by an ELC project.

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Rubber Baron

Publication Year: 2013  / Sources: Global Witness

Cambodia and Laos are in the grip of a land grabbing crisis, driven by Vietnamese ‘rubber barons’. This report reveals how two of Vietnam’s largest companies, Hoang Anh Gia Lai (HAGL) and the Vietnam Rubber Group (VRG), have leased vast tracts of land for plantations in Laos and Cambodia, with disastrous consequences for local communities and the environment. Close ties to corrupt political and business elites provide them with impunity, deals are cloaked in secrecy and they are bankrolled by international finance such as Deutsche Bank and the International Finance Corporation (IFC).

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If you have any resources related to corruption, governance, access to information or related issues that you would like to publish on this platform, please submit it to library@ticambodia.org.

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