What_Getting_Legal_Land_Header.jpg

What Getting Legal Land Title Really Means

An "anti-commons" in Ahmedabad, India?

+ Patricia Clarke Annez, Bijal Bhatt, Bimal Patel

Abstract

This paper documents, for a neighborhood in Ahmedabad, India, what would be involved for current occupants to regularize tenure and register legal title. We show that the process of clearing title can be expensive, fraught with risks, and perhaps impossible to complete for either the current occupants or the owners of record. Staying on the land in their current ambiguous status seems viable for now, but investing in further development is very risky. We discuss these findings in the context of the debate about providing secure tenure to slum dwellers from two perspectives: (i) the practicality of providing legal tenure as part of neighborhood upgrading programs; (ii) the impacts on the real estate market of a system that leaves many private plots, in slums or elsewhere, in legal limbo and difficult to develop—in essence an anti-commons. Both issues are of critical interest as India faces the challenge of urbanization.

 

Download PDF

Patricia Clarke Annez is a Visiting Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. Previously, she served as an Urban Advisor in the Transport and Urban Development Department (TUDUR) at the World Bank.

Bijal Bhatt is the Director at Mahila Housing SEWA Trust.

Bimal Patel is the Director at Environmental Policy Collaborative, Ahmedabad, India.

Back to top
see comments ()