Journal
DEVELOPMENT IN PRACTICE
Volume 29, Issue 3, Pages 371-383Publisher
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09614524.2019.1567688
Keywords
Aid - Development policies; Capacity development; Civil society - Participation; Governance and public policy; Rights; Conflict and reconstruction - Forced displacement; Labour and livelihoods - Poverty reduction; Sub-Saharan Africa
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Land-use planning, although a mechanism for development, can also generate insecurity during its implementation. This article argues that tenure security and land-use planning should not be implemented in isolation from each other. It posits that land-use planning - rather than restricting the security of people's tenure - has the potential to serve as a means of securing tenure. The article explores tenure (in)security elements in land-use planning as a crucial challenge in the urban town of Gelan Sidama Awash, Ethiopia. Using data collected through stakeholders' interviews, it uncovers their tenure security challenges, and outlines a set of measures for enhancing tenure security through land-use planning.
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