Latest Entries

Still Losing Ground

Publication Year: 2010  / Sources: The Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC) and Housing Rights Task Force (HRFT)

The case studies covered in this report provide a window into the lives behind the land disputes occurring in Cambodia. This report gives an up- date on the land disputes and villages affected by them, and seeks to address the doubts of people like Grandma Saing and the others quoted above, as well answer the question “what next?” This collection of 11 case studies represents just a few examples of a tsunami of land disputes that have swept across Cambodia generated by industrial “development projects” during the last nearly two decades.

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Cambodia: Land in Conflict

Publication Year: 2013  / Sources: Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR)

Aware of the growing need for immediate and fundamental land policy reforms in Cambodia, CCHR has produced this Report in order to provide an overview of the land rights situation as it developed in Cambodia throughout 2012 and in the first half of 2013. The Report provides an introduction to the legal, institutional and policy framework related to land and an overview of the root causes and impact of the land conflict affecting the country. The Report also formulates concrete recommendations for the improvement of the land situation in Cambodia and will be used as an advocacy tool to engage with the Cambodian people, national and international organizations, donors, embassies, and of course, with the new RGC.

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Cambodia’s Family Trees: Illegal logging and the stripping of public assets by Cambodia’s elite

Publication Year: 2007  / Sources: Global Witness

Cambodia’s shadow state generates much of its illicit wealth via the expropriation of public assets, particularly natural resources, as well as through institutionalised corruption. With particular reference to the forest sector, this report looks at three of the main ways in which this works.

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Cambodia: Land Management and Administration Project

Publication Year: 2010  / Sources: The Inspection Panel

The Inspection Panel has prepared this Investigation Report in response to the Request for Inspection received on September 4, 2009 from the Centre for Housing Rights and Evictions (COHRE), which submitted the Request on behalf of communities claiming to have been affected by the Land Management and Administration Project (hereinafter referred to as the “Project” or “LMAP”) in Cambodia. These communities are situated in the Boeung Kak Lake (BKL) area, within the Sras Chok commune, Daun Penh district in the Municipality of Phnom Penh. The Requesters asked the Panel to keep the names of the affected people and the villages where they live confidential. The Panel registered the Request for Inspection on September 24, 2009. Management submitted its Response to the Request on November 2, 2009.

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‘Our Land, Our Lives’: Time out on the global land rush

Publication Year: 2012  / Sources: Oxfam

In the past decade an area of land eight times the size of the UK has been sold off globally as land sales rapidly accelerate. This land could feed a billion people, equivalent to the number of people who go to bed hungry each night. In poor countries, foreign investors have been buying an area of land the size of London every six days. With food prices spiking for the third time in four years, interest in land could accelerate again as rich countries try to secure their food supplies and investors see land as a good long-term bet. All too often, forced evictions of poor farmers are a consequence of these rapidly increasing land deals in developing countries. As the world’s leading standard-setter and a big investor itself, the World Bank should freeze its own land investments and review its policy and practice to prevent land-grabbing. In the past the Bank has chosen to freeze lending when poor standards have caused dispossession and suffering. It needs to do so again, in order to play a key role in stopping the global land rush.

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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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