Document Type
Report/Policy Paper
Publication Date
8-2018
Abstract
In the wave of efforts to encourage and support more “responsible” land investments, one aspect has been largely overlooked: are governments equipped with the legal and technical support needed to effectively negotiate and conclude investment contracts that lead to responsible outcomes?
CCSI researched how host governments access legal support in the planning, negotiation, and monitoring of land investments, with a view to better understanding where legal support gaps for governments exist, and how these can be addressed by governments themselves, as well as by donors, support providers and investors.
By scrutinizing “legal support gaps,” CCSI sought to identify possible weak links in global and national efforts to achieve more responsible land investments, as well as opportunities to encourage better practice. For example, legal support holds the potential – albeit not yet regularly realized – to be an entry point for incorporating international best practice and guidelines into negotiations and at other stages of the investment. The report also takes stock of how governments are negotiating and concluding land investments in practice, to determine where additional legal support could potentially improve outcomes for governments.
This work is part of a series of projects and activities, supported by UKaid from the Department for International Development, looking at legal support gaps in the context of land investments.
Disciplines
Agriculture Law | Contracts | Environmental Law | International Law | Land Use Law | Law | Securities Law | Transnational Law
Recommended Citation
Sam Szoke-Burke & Kaitlin Y. Cordes,
Governing Land Investments: Do Governments Have Legal Support Gaps?,
(2018).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/sustainable_investment_staffpubs/60
Included in
Agriculture Law Commons, Contracts Commons, Environmental Law Commons, International Law Commons, Land Use Law Commons, Securities Law Commons, Transnational Law Commons
Comments
Read the briefing note.