LAND TENURE AND THE MANAGEMENT OF LAND RESOURCES IN TRINIDAD AND
TOBAGO
PART 1: LAND TENURE
edited by David Stanfield and Norman Singer, with Steven G. Smith and Jane Dennis
LTC Research Paper 115
Posted July 2006, 290 pp., 7,489 KB (originally published in July 1993)
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ABSTRACT: The potential of the agricultural sector in Trinidad and Tobago
has not been realized in recent decades. The more productive land resources
of the country are underutilized, while many of the more fragile ecosystems
are in danger. This threatens to deny the country potential income from ecotourism
as well as deprive future generations of a stable land, forest, and water base.
The optimal use of the country's land resources requires a stable and secure
tenure system defining land rights. The Government of the Republic of Trinidad
and Tobago contracted the Land Tenure Center to carry out land rationalization
studies, which are intended to assist in the preparation of an action plan to
deal with the problems of the land tenure system. The result was the preparation
of twenty-one studies, which have been organized into two LTC research papers.
This first paper explores the nature and extent of tenure insecurities in both
urban and rural contexts, with a focus on agricultural land tenure problems.
Several hypotheses are advanced concerning the possible constraints that legal
and social insecurity of tenure pose for the future development of the country.
Also explored are the environmental problems that past tenure regimes have helped
generate, and what might comprise a strategy for protecting fragile ecosystems.
A second paper (LTC Research Paper 116) will dig more deeply into the institutional
and historical roots of the tenure insecurity problems. A final report presented
to the government in August 1992 described a Land Rationalization and Development
Programme, which was derived from the twenty-one studies carried out by LTC.
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