997 resultados para Communal land grants
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Environmentalists have called for a new property paradigm premised on the idea of land ownership as a delegated responsibility to manage land and resources for the public benefit. An examination of Crown freehold grants from the beginnings of settlement until the 1890s in Queensland shows that fee simple titles were granted subject to express conditions and reservations designed to reserve useful natural resources to the Crown, and to promote public purposes. Over time, legislative regulation of landowner’s rights rendered obsolete the use of express conditions and reservations in grants. One result of this change was that the inherently limited nature of fee simple ownership, and the communal obligations to which it is subject, are less transparent than in colonial times.
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The lack of public-mindedness can cause problems in the social order of people’s daily lives, such as the tragedy of the commons and the problem of free riders. Some scholars such as Habermas assert that communicative rationality is the solution, expecting that individuals will communicate with each other to reach a consensus without being bounded by aspects of social background. Other scholars advocate the revitalization of traditional community culture. These arguments, however, are not based on reality. By using the case of communal land formation in rural Thailand, the author shows that collective action is neither a revival of tradition nor a result of communication free from social constraints. Rather, cooperation emerges because the people rationally respond to their present needs and have built, through daily social interactions, taken-for-granted knowledge about how they should behave for cooperation.
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Lynn J. Frazier, chairman.
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El objetivo del trabajo es realizar un análisis sobre la construcción del poder político post-independiente en la campaña de Buenos Aires. Para ello se examinan conjuntamente dos variables significativas: la política de tierras públicas -especialmente las donaciones ejidales y condicionadas- y la distribución de la riqueza. Se abordan dos casos de estudio de forma confrontada: la Guardia de Luján y los partidos de Azul y Tapalqué, donde las modalidades de donación se implementaron, estudiando las características de la legislación y su aplicación, el perfil socio-económico de los sectores beneficiados y su relación con la formación de los consensos sociales necesarios para erigir la potestad del Estado. Se presta especial atención a la conformación de las nuevas comunidades políticas, específicamente, durante el gobierno de Juan Manuel de Rosas y la etapa inmediatamente posterior
Resumo:
El objetivo del trabajo es realizar un análisis sobre la construcción del poder político post-independiente en la campaña de Buenos Aires. Para ello se examinan conjuntamente dos variables significativas: la política de tierras públicas -especialmente las donaciones ejidales y condicionadas- y la distribución de la riqueza. Se abordan dos casos de estudio de forma confrontada: la Guardia de Luján y los partidos de Azul y Tapalqué, donde las modalidades de donación se implementaron, estudiando las características de la legislación y su aplicación, el perfil socio-económico de los sectores beneficiados y su relación con la formación de los consensos sociales necesarios para erigir la potestad del Estado. Se presta especial atención a la conformación de las nuevas comunidades políticas, específicamente, durante el gobierno de Juan Manuel de Rosas y la etapa inmediatamente posterior
Resumo:
El objetivo del trabajo es realizar un análisis sobre la construcción del poder político post-independiente en la campaña de Buenos Aires. Para ello se examinan conjuntamente dos variables significativas: la política de tierras públicas -especialmente las donaciones ejidales y condicionadas- y la distribución de la riqueza. Se abordan dos casos de estudio de forma confrontada: la Guardia de Luján y los partidos de Azul y Tapalqué, donde las modalidades de donación se implementaron, estudiando las características de la legislación y su aplicación, el perfil socio-económico de los sectores beneficiados y su relación con la formación de los consensos sociales necesarios para erigir la potestad del Estado. Se presta especial atención a la conformación de las nuevas comunidades políticas, específicamente, durante el gobierno de Juan Manuel de Rosas y la etapa inmediatamente posterior
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This layer is a georeferenced raster image of the historic paper map entitled: Map of the middle states of North America : shewing the position of the Geneseo country comprehending the counties of Ontario & Steuben as laid off in townships of six miles squar[e] each, Maverick, sculpt. It was printed by T. & J. Swords for Charles Williamson's Description of the settlement of the Genesee country, in the state of New-York, 1799. Scale [ca. 1:2,250,000]. Partial cadastral map showing large land purchases and township grants in New York State. Covers New York, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Jersey, Washington, D.C. and portions of Maryland, Delaware, and West Virginia. The image inside the map neatline is georeferenced to the surface of the earth and fit to the Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) Zone 18N NAD83 projection. All map collar and inset information is also available as part of the raster image, including any inset maps, profiles, statistical tables, directories, text, illustrations, index maps, legends, or other information associated with the principal map. This map shows features such as roads, drainage, major cities and towns, land purchases, township grants, state boundaries, and more. Includes key to "principal villages in Ontario & Steuben counties." This layer is part of a selection of digitally scanned and georeferenced historic maps from The Harvard Map Collection as part of the Imaging the Urban Environment project. Maps selected for this project represent major urban areas and cities of the world, at various time periods. These maps typically portray both natural and manmade features at a large scale. The selection represents a range of regions, originators, ground condition dates, scales, and purposes.
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This is a land grant for Eleanor Ostrander for 200 acres, Lots 115 and 169, in the Township of Thorold, County of Lincoln, District of Niagara.
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Agricultural land use in much of Brong-Ahafo region, Ghana has been shifting from the production of food crops towards increased cashew nut cultivation in recent years. This article explores everyday, less visible, gendered and generational struggles over family farms in West Africa, based on qualitative, participatory research in a rural community that is becoming increasingly integrated into the global capitalist system. As a tree crop, cashew was regarded as an individual man's property to be passed on to his wife and children rather than to extended family members, which differed from the communal land tenure arrangements governing food crop cultivation. The tendency for land, cash crops and income to be controlled by men, despite women's and young people's significant labour contributions to family farms, and for women to rely on food crop production for their main source of income and for household food security, means that women and girls are more likely to lose out when cashew plantations are expanded to the detriment of land for food crops. Intergenerational tensions emerged when young people felt that their parents and elders were neglecting their views and concerns. The research provides important insights into gendered and generational power relations regarding land access, property rights and intra-household decision-making processes. Greater dialogue between genders and generations may help to tackle unequal power relations and lead to shared decision-making processes that build the resilience of rural communities.
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"The problems that exist in the world today cannot be solved by the level of thinking we were at when we created them." That quote, attributed to Albert Einstein, epitomizes for me the importance of land grant universities in the 21 st century, and whenever I hear someone say that land grants are obsolete - which, occasionally, I do hear - I want to pull that quote out and say "here - read this." When all the problems in the world have been solved, then - and only then - will land grant universities be obsolete. Maybe. I'm not really willing to commit to the idea that the day of obsolete land grants ever will come, but if all the problems in the world are one day solved, then maybe - maybe - I'd consider it.
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Good afternoon. It is a real pleasure for me to be here with you today, and I thank you for inviting me. I also, as I begin my remarks today, want to thank each of you for the work you do, everyday, to help make this a better university. Please know that work is both valued and appreciated. I'd like to talk with you about a couple of topics today, and after that I'm going to open the floor for questions and comments. I look forward to hearing what you have to say, too. The first topic I'm going to talk about in the next few minutes is our land grant mission. People who know me at all can tell you I am passionate about land grants because I believe being part of a land grant university and helping to advance the land grant mission is one of the great privileges and responsibilities of our times.
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WI docs. no: Coa.6/2:G 7/L 3
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Includes index.