Chapter, Paragraph
1 Pre | a Better Distribution of Land: the Challenge of Agrarian
2 Pre | and misappropriation of land. These problems affect the
3 Pre | situations of property and land use, present on almost all
4 Pre | to enjoy the use of the land and its goods that the Lord
5 Intro | misappropriation and concentration of land — that is that good which,
6 Intro | misappropriation and concentration of land in latifundia,(2) calling
7 Intro | by which the ownership of land becomes concentrated in
8 Intro | attention to problems of land ownership and spurs them
9 Intro | bishops on the subject of land and its equitable distribution(3)
10 Intro (2)| in this document is large land holdings, often belonging
11 Intro (2)| absentee owners where the land is worked by hired labour,
12 Intro (2)| techniques. The resources of the land are also generally under-utilised.~
13 Intro (3)| Pastoral Commission for Land, have spoken out several
14 I,1 | possessing most of the arable land, while vast numbers of very
15 I,1 | settlers farm the remaining land, which is often of inferior
16 I,1 | of many such countries' land systems.(4)~The historical
17 I,1 | origins of the process of land concentration vary from
18 I,1 | colonial rule, concentration of land in large holdings really
19 I,1 | private appropriation of the land, favoured by laws which
20 I,1 | serious distortions into the land market.(5)~The private appropriation
21 I,1 | private appropriation of land not only led to the formation
22 I (5) | purchasing, or even occupying, land outside these reservations;~
23 I,1 | acquire a meager piece of land to work with their families.
24 I,1 | fertile and more isolated land which required proportionately
25 I,1 | the already small area of land owned and, in any case,
26 I (6) | and misappropriation of land.~
27 I,3 | a more just division of land ownership and use have been
28 I,3 | distribution and re-allocation of land.~Failure can be laid partly
29 I,3 | peasant farmers from the land and their migration to urban
30 I,3 | migration to urban centers or to land that is still free, but
31 I,3 | the farmers' payment for land that are compatible with
32 I,3 | against traditional forms of land tenure.~Two more factors
33 I,3 | granting of huge tracts of land to members of the ruling
34 I,4 | of the concentration of land in the hands of the few.~
35 I,4 | price relations between land and work.~All this has encouraged
36 I,4 | accumulation based on investment in land, with small farmers, who
37 I,4 | on the sidelines of the land market, being excluded from
38 I,4 | the process.~The rise in land prices and the fall in the
39 I,4 | hence the acquisition of land, difficult for small farmers
40 I,4 | give up ownership of their land.~
41 I,5 | Expropriation of the Land of Indigenous Populations~
42 I,5 | have steadily expanded into land traditionally occupied by
43 I,5 | occupation and ownership of the land the origins of which are
44 I,5 | indigenous populations, land is seen as the basis of
45 I,5 | legal right to ownership of land on which they had lived
46 I,5 | invaders" of their own land.~The only ways they can
47 I,5 | expulsion from their own land is by agreeing to work for
48 I,5 | they are deprived of their land and their culture.~
49 I,6 | been farming State or other land for a long time, or in order
50 I,6 | order to take possession of land occupied by indigenous populations.~
51 I,7 | present process under which land ownership is being concentrated
52 I,7 | regarding both recognition of land titles and in relation to
53 I,8 | administrative institutions as land registers often make it
54 I,8 | of ownership rights over land that they have been farming
55 I,8 | often stripped of their land because it falls by law
56 I,8 | uncertainty over ownership of the land is a major disincentive
57 I,8 | access to credit for which land is used as a guarantee.
58 I,9 | because of the role given to land as a guarantee, as well
59 I,9 | even total loss of their land — for property speculation
60 I,9 | production inputs, particularly land, and therefore to be the
61 I (11) | agrarian economies between land ownership, access to credit
62 I,12 | Economic Policies Concerning Land Tenure~Economic Consequences~
63 I,12 | Imbalances in the division of land ownership and the policies
64 I,12 | listed:~a) distortions in the land market: political interventions
65 I,12 | to further investment in land, and hence a rise in its
66 I,12 | their purchasing power for land eroded, and hence their
67 I,12 | efficiency and equity of the land market through normal trading
68 I,12 | the greater part of the land, is less, with the consequent
69 I,13 | to force them off their land. They have to look on as
70 I,13 | environmental balance of their land is destroyed.~20. For many
71 I,13 | countries, even those rich in land and natural resources, hunger
72 I,13 | production. While the use of land for export production reduces
73 I,14 | inequalities in the distribution of land ownership set in motion
74 I,14 | forced to search for new land, therefore occupying structurally
75 II | CHURCH ~ON OWNERSHIP OF LAND ~AND AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT~
76 II,2 | when he had his own plot of land. However, the Old Testament
77 II,2 | not the true master of his land, but rather an administrator.
78 II,2 | of Leviticus states: "The land shall not be sold in perpetuity,
79 II,2 | sold in perpetuity, for the land is mine; for you are strangers
80 II,2 | 25:23).~In Egypt, the land belonged to the Pharaoh,
81 II,2 | with the king granting land in exchange for fidelity
82 II,2 | person who has the use of land of its possession, for this
83 II,3 | to bind the ownership of land to its possessor in perpetuity
84 II,3 | perpetuity and also to distribute land equitably among all the
85 II,3 | third freedom concerns the land, which must be allowed to
86 II,3 | Lev 25:17) and "... the land is mine; for you are strangers
87 II,3 | brought you forth out of the land of Egypt to give you the
88 II,3 | of Egypt to give you the land of Canaan, and to be your
89 II,4 | Ownership of Land in the Social Teaching of
90 II (21) | ground, those in the sea, on land, or in space. He takes all
91 II,5 | of peasant farmers from land they have been farming,
92 II,5 | occupation of uncultivated land on the part of peasant farmers
93 II,6 | the earth as productive land, and in condemning latifundia
94 II,6 | who have too little or no land to farm.~In the social teaching
95 II,6 | the misappropriation of land by large landholders or
96 II,6 | indigenous populations of their land.~These are particularly
97 II,6 | about ways of exploiting the land that upset balances between
98 II,6 | and misappropriation of land as contrary to the principle
99 II,7 | to private ownership of land are unable to prevent its
100 II,7 | dependent on work on the land. When large landholdings
101 II,7 | justifies expropriation of land — with adequate compensation
102 II,7 | redistribution of the ownership of land.~Expropriation of land and
103 II,7 | of land.~Expropriation of land and its redistribution are
104 II,8 | extending private ownership of land as long as public authorities
105 II,9 | also State ownership of land as leading to a depersonalization
106 II,9 | farm, to have access to the land credit market, and to ensure
107 II,10 | only legitimate form of land ownership, but also holds
108 II,11 | to private ownership of land. The close links between
109 II,12 | no longer possession of land, but possession of the whole
110 II,12 | becoming no less important than land: the possession of know-how,
111 II,12 | productive capacities of the land and other inputs, and the
112 III,1 | misappropriation and concentration of land in latifundia acts as a
113 III,1 | that ensures a different land distribution.~The quality
114 III,1 | reform that ensures access to land, its efficient use and increased
115 III,1 | law — to the problem of land occupation. Such occupation
116 III,1 | to do with the issue of land.~Land occupation is often
117 III,1 | with the issue of land.~Land occupation is often an expression
118 III,1 | condemnation and repression of land occupation of any credibility.~
119 III,2 | and distribution of this land to those who have been accorded
120 III,2 | therefore ensure that access to land fully meets these objectives.
121 III,2 | reform is confined simply to land redistribution, the struggle
122 III,2 | commitment to ensuring access to land constitutes merely the first
123 III,4 | Those who have received land must be guaranteed the possibility
124 III,4 | prices.~The beneficiaries of land redistribution do not usually
125 III,6 | conferring the right to land ownership, and the educational
126 III,6 | of an effective right to land, with concrete attention
127 III,7 | created by redistribution of land.~These farms are faced with
128 III,7 | aspire to the allocation of land means that the vast majority
129 III,8 | close relationship between land and the models of culture,
130 III,8 | the problem of restoring land traditionally occupied by
131 III,8 | the development of their land and benefitting from treatment
132 III,8 | common ownership and that of land privatization. Traditional
133 III,8 | Traditional systems of land possession based on common
134 III,8 | individual assignment of land ownership to develop also
135 III (52) | the amount of available land. In this case, common ownership
136 III (52) | ownership guarantees access to land for all the members of the
137 III (52) | their very modest plots of land. In other words, common
138 III,9 | and possession and use of land, taking particular care
139 III,10 | production and in the price of land, and such increases make
140 III,10 | result of a concentration of land in a few hands, of a widespread
141 Conclu | equitable redistribution of land, central to the jubilee
142 Conclu | through a distribution of land ownership carried out in
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