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Good practice from Tanzania: Joint village land use planning

  1. Ulaanbaatar, 8th MSP Meeting 11-15 June, 2018 Good practice from Tanzania: Joint village land use planning Fiona Flintan Senior Scientist, ILRI
  2. Background: Tanzania o 12,545 registered villages o Human population 50 million o Livestock population 28 million cattle, 17 million goats, 5 million sheep and 0.8 million donkeys o Land Act No. 4 1999 established three land categories – general, reserved and village land o Village Land Act No. 5 1999 regulates village land o Land Use Planning Act No. 2007 gives authority to villages to plan village land o National Land Use Planning Commission Participatory Land Use Planning at village and district level o Land use plan & certificate of customary rights of occupancy (1713 villages 13% VLUPs) o Land under increasing pressure – increasing conflicts between herders and agriculturalists #LivestockAgenda
  3. Sixth Multi-stakeholder Partnership (MSP) meeting Panama 20-23 June 2016
  4. Sixth Multi-stakeholder Partnership (MSP) meeting Panama 20-23 June 2016
  5. Sixth Multi-stakeholder Partnership (MSP) meeting Panama 20-23 June 2016
  6. Sixth Multi-stakeholder Partnership (MSP) meeting Panama 20-23 June 2016
  7. www.livestockdialogue.org Livestock-Dialogue@fao.org #LivestockAgenda

Editor's Notes

  1. Good afternoon. We are grateful for your invitation and pleased to share this update on the Global Agenda for Sustainable Livestock with you. IFIF is a partner of the Global Agenda since March 2013 and has been participating actively in our Guiding Group as private sector representative through Alexandra de Athayde.
  2. The real and technical work of the Global Agenda is done in Action Networks. These Action Networks are dynamic and rely on their own partnership and their links to likeminded partner institutions. In the Action networks experts from the different clusters exchange and enhance their experiences.
  3. The real and technical work of the Global Agenda is done in Action Networks. These Action Networks are dynamic and rely on their own partnership and their links to likeminded partner institutions. In the Action networks experts from the different clusters exchange and enhance their experiences.
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