Abstract

The major global pressures of rapid urbanization and urban growth are being compounded by climate impacts, resulting in increased vulnerability for urban dwellers, with these vulnerabilities exacerbated during the COVID-19 pandemic. Much of this is concentrated in urban and peri-urban areas where urban development spreads into hazard-prone areas. Often, this development is dominated by poor-quality homes in informal settlements or slums with poor tenure security. Lessons from a resilience-building project in the Pacific shows that a fit-for-purpose (FFP) approach to land administration can provide solutions by increasing the number of households with security of tenure, and consequently, improving resilience outcomes as informal settlements grow. This paper specifically discusses the influence of FFP land administration on reducing vulnerabilities to external shocks, such as climate change and COVID-19. It proposes ways to be better manage urban growth through the responsible governance of land tenure rights and more effective land-use planning to improve resilience to multiple shocks and stresses, hence, delivering improved access to safe land and shelter. Land administration systems can contribute to enhanced resilience to the shocks of climate extremes and pandemics by improving tenure security and enhancing land-use planning controls. It is argued that climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction need to be better mainstreamed into two major elements of land governance: (i) securing and safeguarding of land rights, and (ii) planning and control of land use.

Highlights

  • Urbanization is a key driver of both climate vulnerability and tenure insecurity in urban settlements in the Global South [1]

  • Based on an extensive literature review, and participatory action research based in Honiara, this paper discussed how improving tenure security at scale using the fit-for-purpose land administration (FFP LAS) approach can enhance community resilience

  • FFP LAS is necessary for improved tenure security at scale, with an approach that includes emphasizing adopting visible boundaries and the use of large-scale imagery to support the spatial, legal, and institutional components of land administration

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Summary

Introduction

Urbanization is a key driver of both climate vulnerability and tenure insecurity in urban settlements in the Global South [1]. Insecure land tenure exacerbates vulnerability to climate-related hazards [3,4], as these households are disconnected from formal governance processes, lack knowledge to inform resilience decisions, and have restricted access to finance for actions to strengthen their adaptive capacity [5]. Land 2021, 10, 563 action research that commenced in 2012 under UN-Habitat ‘Cities and Climate Change Initiative’ and is continuing through the Climate Resilient Honiara (CRH) project support by the UNFCCC Adaptation Fund, which commenced in 2018 [15] The lessons from this engagement in Honiara include experiences prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study examined six key areas: (1) livelihood security and household income, (ii) food security, (iii) access to health care, (iv) knowledge, attitudes and practices related to COVID-19, (v) climate related hazards and COVID-19, and (vi) tenure security [16]

Pandemics and Land Tenure Rights
COVID-19 Issues in Honiara
FFP LAS for Urban Resilience
FFP LAS Approach to Building the Spatial Framework
Action Planning
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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