MITIGATING LAND CORRUPTION THROUGH COMPUTERISATION OF STATUTORY LAND GOVERNANCE ACTIVITIES: EVIDENCE FROM DRC, TANZANIA AND ZAMBIA

This study was on mitigating land corruption through computerisation of land governance activities that include land use planning, cadastral surveying, servicing of land, land allocation, land registration and titling and land development. Using evidence from Lubumbashi (Democratic Republic of the C...

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Main Author: Anthony Mushinge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EL-AYACHI 2020-09-01
Series:African Journal on Land Policy and Geospatial Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revues.imist.ma/index.php/AJLP-GS/article/view/18362
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spelling doaj-46139ef708b7493d8ea2868a240e464d2021-06-07T08:56:19ZengEL-AYACHIAfrican Journal on Land Policy and Geospatial Sciences2657-26642020-09-01347281https://doi.org/10.48346/IMIST.PRSM/ajlp-gs.v3i3.18362MITIGATING LAND CORRUPTION THROUGH COMPUTERISATION OF STATUTORY LAND GOVERNANCE ACTIVITIES: EVIDENCE FROM DRC, TANZANIA AND ZAMBIAAnthony Mushinge0Copperbelt University, Kitwe, ZambiaThis study was on mitigating land corruption through computerisation of land governance activities that include land use planning, cadastral surveying, servicing of land, land allocation, land registration and titling and land development. Using evidence from Lubumbashi (Democratic Republic of the Congo), Dar es Salaam (Tanzania) and Kitwe (Zambia), the study used both primary and secondary data to conclude that despite computerisation of land governance activities in Tanzania and Zambia, corruption still persists. On the other hand, land governance activities in Lubumbashi (Democratic Republic of the Congo) were still paper based and this made the activities highly susceptible to corruption. Causes of corruption identified were low salaries for employees in public land institutions, delay in payment of salaries, lack of monitoring in the services provided, cumbersome procedures, and lack of transparency. In view of these, it is recommended that the respective governments should work on reducing corruption through increasing salaries for employees in land institutions, pay salaries on time, effective monitoring in the services provided, streamlining procedures and ensure transparency.https://revues.imist.ma/index.php/AJLP-GS/article/view/18362corruptionland governancestatutory landdemocratic republic of the congotanzaniazambia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anthony Mushinge
spellingShingle Anthony Mushinge
MITIGATING LAND CORRUPTION THROUGH COMPUTERISATION OF STATUTORY LAND GOVERNANCE ACTIVITIES: EVIDENCE FROM DRC, TANZANIA AND ZAMBIA
African Journal on Land Policy and Geospatial Sciences
corruption
land governance
statutory land
democratic republic of the congo
tanzania
zambia
author_facet Anthony Mushinge
author_sort Anthony Mushinge
title MITIGATING LAND CORRUPTION THROUGH COMPUTERISATION OF STATUTORY LAND GOVERNANCE ACTIVITIES: EVIDENCE FROM DRC, TANZANIA AND ZAMBIA
title_short MITIGATING LAND CORRUPTION THROUGH COMPUTERISATION OF STATUTORY LAND GOVERNANCE ACTIVITIES: EVIDENCE FROM DRC, TANZANIA AND ZAMBIA
title_full MITIGATING LAND CORRUPTION THROUGH COMPUTERISATION OF STATUTORY LAND GOVERNANCE ACTIVITIES: EVIDENCE FROM DRC, TANZANIA AND ZAMBIA
title_fullStr MITIGATING LAND CORRUPTION THROUGH COMPUTERISATION OF STATUTORY LAND GOVERNANCE ACTIVITIES: EVIDENCE FROM DRC, TANZANIA AND ZAMBIA
title_full_unstemmed MITIGATING LAND CORRUPTION THROUGH COMPUTERISATION OF STATUTORY LAND GOVERNANCE ACTIVITIES: EVIDENCE FROM DRC, TANZANIA AND ZAMBIA
title_sort mitigating land corruption through computerisation of statutory land governance activities: evidence from drc, tanzania and zambia
publisher EL-AYACHI
series African Journal on Land Policy and Geospatial Sciences
issn 2657-2664
publishDate 2020-09-01
description This study was on mitigating land corruption through computerisation of land governance activities that include land use planning, cadastral surveying, servicing of land, land allocation, land registration and titling and land development. Using evidence from Lubumbashi (Democratic Republic of the Congo), Dar es Salaam (Tanzania) and Kitwe (Zambia), the study used both primary and secondary data to conclude that despite computerisation of land governance activities in Tanzania and Zambia, corruption still persists. On the other hand, land governance activities in Lubumbashi (Democratic Republic of the Congo) were still paper based and this made the activities highly susceptible to corruption. Causes of corruption identified were low salaries for employees in public land institutions, delay in payment of salaries, lack of monitoring in the services provided, cumbersome procedures, and lack of transparency. In view of these, it is recommended that the respective governments should work on reducing corruption through increasing salaries for employees in land institutions, pay salaries on time, effective monitoring in the services provided, streamlining procedures and ensure transparency.
topic corruption
land governance
statutory land
democratic republic of the congo
tanzania
zambia
url https://revues.imist.ma/index.php/AJLP-GS/article/view/18362
work_keys_str_mv AT anthonymushinge mitigatinglandcorruptionthroughcomputerisationofstatutorylandgovernanceactivitiesevidencefromdrctanzaniaandzambia
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