From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Monday, March 21, 2011 8:52 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Land Ownership & Tenure for issue of "Race/Ethnicity"
> H-ASIA
> March 21, 2011
>
> Call for papers: Land Ownership and Tenure for special issue of
> "Race/Ethnicity"
>                                             DEADLINE SEPTEMBER 15, 2011
> ***********************************************************************
> Ed. note: Consulting the webpage link below, the further detail is that
> this call is for Volume 5, Number 3 (Spring 2012)                  FFC
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> Land Ownership and Tenure
>
> Call for Papers Date: 2011-09-15
> Date Submitted: 2011-03-17
> Announcement ID: 183967
>
> UN-Habitat, The United Nations Human Settlements Programme, concluded that 
> more than one billion people live without any security of tenure in 
> informal settlements in developing countries. While most developed 
> countries have records that cover most of their territories, very few 
> countries in the Global South have such records. This discrepancy 
> underscores the unjust politics of landownership and land distribution 
> that contributed to an inequitable world politics of social progress and 
> human development.
>
>
> Topics of inquiry can include but are not limited to:
>
> How race relations impact the accessibility to land and land distribution 
> in marginalized communities?
>
> How ethnic minority define their rights and access to land in the age of 
> neo-liberalism?
>
> In which ways, equal citizenship status has been affected by access to 
> land and land rights in countries across the Global South?
>
> How we can assess the concept of collective landownership and access to 
> land that reside within indigenous peoples cosmovision vs. individualized 
> notion of ownership that increasingly informs the scrambling attitude of 
> corporations to acquire land in the Global South?
>
> How do these issues continue to play out in the United States in 
> particular and North America in general? In Europe?  How we can envision 
> alternative and practical aspect of a democratic and collective 
> community-based ownership and access to land, and what that 
> conceptualization would looks like in the age of economic globalization?
>
> The effectiveness of land-certification projects and other pro-poor 
> legislation for racial and ethnic minorities.
>
> Leslie Shortlidge
> Kirwan Institute
> Ohio State University
> 433 Mendenhall Lab
> 125 south oval Mall
> Columbus Ohio 43229
>
> Email: shortlidge.2@osu.edu
> Visit the website at http://www.raceethnicity.org
>
>
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