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Institutional Analysis of Land Tenure System in Post-socialist Russia: Actors, Rules and Land Use. / Fadeeva, O. P.; Soliev, I. S.

KULUNDA: Climate Smart Agriculture: South Siberian agro-steppe as pioneering region for sustainable land use. ed. / M Fruhauf; G Guggenberger; T Meinel; Theesfeld; S Lentz. Springer International Publishing AG, 2020. p. 259-273 (Innovations in Landscape Research).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Fadeeva, OP & Soliev, IS 2020, Institutional Analysis of Land Tenure System in Post-socialist Russia: Actors, Rules and Land Use. in M Fruhauf, G Guggenberger, T Meinel, Theesfeld & S Lentz (eds), KULUNDA: Climate Smart Agriculture: South Siberian agro-steppe as pioneering region for sustainable land use. Innovations in Landscape Research, Springer International Publishing AG, pp. 259-273. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-15927-6_18

APA

Fadeeva, O. P., & Soliev, I. S. (2020). Institutional Analysis of Land Tenure System in Post-socialist Russia: Actors, Rules and Land Use. In M. Fruhauf, G. Guggenberger, T. Meinel, Theesfeld, & S. Lentz (Eds.), KULUNDA: Climate Smart Agriculture: South Siberian agro-steppe as pioneering region for sustainable land use (pp. 259-273). (Innovations in Landscape Research). Springer International Publishing AG. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-15927-6_18

Vancouver

Fadeeva OP, Soliev IS. Institutional Analysis of Land Tenure System in Post-socialist Russia: Actors, Rules and Land Use. In Fruhauf M, Guggenberger G, Meinel T, Theesfeld, Lentz S, editors, KULUNDA: Climate Smart Agriculture: South Siberian agro-steppe as pioneering region for sustainable land use. Springer International Publishing AG. 2020. p. 259-273. (Innovations in Landscape Research). doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-15927-6_18

Author

Fadeeva, O. P. ; Soliev, I. S. / Institutional Analysis of Land Tenure System in Post-socialist Russia: Actors, Rules and Land Use. KULUNDA: Climate Smart Agriculture: South Siberian agro-steppe as pioneering region for sustainable land use. editor / M Fruhauf ; G Guggenberger ; T Meinel ; Theesfeld ; S Lentz. Springer International Publishing AG, 2020. pp. 259-273 (Innovations in Landscape Research).

BibTeX

@inbook{87e8439140a44bc8a20ef0446c367866,
title = "Institutional Analysis of Land Tenure System in Post-socialist Russia: Actors, Rules and Land Use",
abstract = "Governing land tenure and particularly ownership rights to land in post-socialist Russia is a long-term process that involves changes in norms, rules and administrative procedures. We analyse the land privatization reform in the context of evolving institutional limitations caused by the discontinuity and inconsistency of reform: domination of common (shared and joint) ownership, complications related to registering titles and lease agreements, and weakening of the state's role in controlling sustainability of land use. The agricultural districts of the Kulunda region of Altai Krai serve as a case study to show that, because of the development of informal local practices, the institutionalization of land relations is increasing as the investment appeal of the agricultural sector grows. Materials from in-depth interviews, participant observation, informal conversations and interactions, stakeholder workshops and statistical reports, are used to analyse existing practices in the interaction of the key actors in processes that are shaping up the current land tenure system. We discuss implications of the identified inconsistencies for long-term stability of the land tenure system and sustainability of land use. We will show that insecure formal land rights and the partly not functioning governance system pose high risks for innovation in agriculture. We observe that informal practices emerge to fill the flaws in the formal institutional arrangements, thereby increasing the relative stability of the resulting land use model. However, the overall prevalence of informal practices hinders the ability of actors to make long-term plans based on reliable expectations, raising equitability concerns and undermining efforts to shift to new technologies.",
keywords = "Privatization, Land reform, Ownership rights, Land tenure, Land use practices, Informal institutions, Kulunda region, Altai Krai, PROPERTY",
author = "Fadeeva, {O. P.} and Soliev, {I. S.}",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-030-15927-6_18",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-030-15926-9",
series = "Innovations in Landscape Research",
publisher = "Springer International Publishing AG",
pages = "259--273",
editor = "M Fruhauf and G Guggenberger and T Meinel and Theesfeld and S Lentz",
booktitle = "KULUNDA: Climate Smart Agriculture: South Siberian agro-steppe as pioneering region for sustainable land use",
address = "Switzerland",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Institutional Analysis of Land Tenure System in Post-socialist Russia: Actors, Rules and Land Use

AU - Fadeeva, O. P.

AU - Soliev, I. S.

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Governing land tenure and particularly ownership rights to land in post-socialist Russia is a long-term process that involves changes in norms, rules and administrative procedures. We analyse the land privatization reform in the context of evolving institutional limitations caused by the discontinuity and inconsistency of reform: domination of common (shared and joint) ownership, complications related to registering titles and lease agreements, and weakening of the state's role in controlling sustainability of land use. The agricultural districts of the Kulunda region of Altai Krai serve as a case study to show that, because of the development of informal local practices, the institutionalization of land relations is increasing as the investment appeal of the agricultural sector grows. Materials from in-depth interviews, participant observation, informal conversations and interactions, stakeholder workshops and statistical reports, are used to analyse existing practices in the interaction of the key actors in processes that are shaping up the current land tenure system. We discuss implications of the identified inconsistencies for long-term stability of the land tenure system and sustainability of land use. We will show that insecure formal land rights and the partly not functioning governance system pose high risks for innovation in agriculture. We observe that informal practices emerge to fill the flaws in the formal institutional arrangements, thereby increasing the relative stability of the resulting land use model. However, the overall prevalence of informal practices hinders the ability of actors to make long-term plans based on reliable expectations, raising equitability concerns and undermining efforts to shift to new technologies.

AB - Governing land tenure and particularly ownership rights to land in post-socialist Russia is a long-term process that involves changes in norms, rules and administrative procedures. We analyse the land privatization reform in the context of evolving institutional limitations caused by the discontinuity and inconsistency of reform: domination of common (shared and joint) ownership, complications related to registering titles and lease agreements, and weakening of the state's role in controlling sustainability of land use. The agricultural districts of the Kulunda region of Altai Krai serve as a case study to show that, because of the development of informal local practices, the institutionalization of land relations is increasing as the investment appeal of the agricultural sector grows. Materials from in-depth interviews, participant observation, informal conversations and interactions, stakeholder workshops and statistical reports, are used to analyse existing practices in the interaction of the key actors in processes that are shaping up the current land tenure system. We discuss implications of the identified inconsistencies for long-term stability of the land tenure system and sustainability of land use. We will show that insecure formal land rights and the partly not functioning governance system pose high risks for innovation in agriculture. We observe that informal practices emerge to fill the flaws in the formal institutional arrangements, thereby increasing the relative stability of the resulting land use model. However, the overall prevalence of informal practices hinders the ability of actors to make long-term plans based on reliable expectations, raising equitability concerns and undermining efforts to shift to new technologies.

KW - Privatization

KW - Land reform

KW - Ownership rights

KW - Land tenure

KW - Land use practices

KW - Informal institutions

KW - Kulunda region

KW - Altai Krai

KW - PROPERTY

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-15927-6_18

DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-15927-6_18

M3 - Chapter

SN - 978-3-030-15926-9

T3 - Innovations in Landscape Research

SP - 259

EP - 273

BT - KULUNDA: Climate Smart Agriculture: South Siberian agro-steppe as pioneering region for sustainable land use

A2 - Fruhauf, M

A2 - Guggenberger, G

A2 - Meinel, T

A2 - Theesfeld, null

A2 - Lentz, S

PB - Springer International Publishing AG

ER -

ID: 26075189