Land Law - branch of law that regulates public relations in the implementation of property rights and other proprietary rights to the land and its subdivision, the characteristics of civil turnover of land, restrictions on the use of land as a unique natural object, as well as the activities of public authorities to ensure the rational use of land and its protection. The need for legal, private and public, social, economic, state is linked to the principle of law enforcement to create a structure, the registry and registrar, whose main mission is to disseminate, and publish, the real owners of property and certain entitlements of interests. This organization publishes the status of a particular farm, also retains indefinitely the advertising, while noting mutations or changes that may occur. In its tangible form, the land law is subject to reduction or enlargement and subdivision in the ownership of more people, and dismemberments of the right. The owner becomes the lawful owner, or the owner trustee or beneficial owner, operations that can also work in reverse in any legal situation. The cases in this paper discuss the land laws with respect to the issue of overriding, minor intretst and the original agreements (McAuslan 2003, 23 - 67).
Discussion
Land Tenure Reform
Land tenure, or rural property rights, can be defined in several ways. The terms generally concern the ways in which “social relations relate to land use and ownership.” One popular way to view land tenure is as a bundle of rights within a society or community. In such a bundle, rights can be added, removed, or divided to create a very wide variety of rights to land and land-based resources. While land rights are often thought to be produced by titles, deeds, registries, and leases, in reality these are artifacts of a system that involves enforcement, dispute resolution, evidence, identity, forms of logic, institutional formation and operation, and derivation and maintenance of authority and legitimacy. The relevance of land tenure to geography lies in its explicit spatial relevance to Earth's surface, along with how human elements (based on rights) are arrayed within space. This entry describes the fundamental aspect of tenure security, the types of land tenure, and the more accepted land tenure paradigms (Mackin 2006, 34 - 67).
Land tenure reform is broadly understood to be a reworking or reorientation of policies, laws, and approaches for managing land tenure—in other words, a restructuring of legal and social relations concerning land. This can include replacing or consolidating laws or making additions to laws to accommodate a new approach to land tenure. Land tenure reform is distinct from land reform in that land is ordinarily not confiscated from some people and redistributed to others as a part of land reform. Thus, land tenure reform is closer to land policy reform. However, land tenure reform can be used to achieve forms of land reform through community-driven land acquisition, market-assisted acquisition, resettlement, or delivery of forms of equity and justice through markets or other incentive ...