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Environmental Management in Uganda: The Importance of Property Law and Local Government in Wetlands Conservation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Extract

The development of strategies for the conservation and wise use of wetlands in Uganda is significant for what it reveals about how law contributes to the sustainable management of natural resources in poor countries in general. The highly inter-disciplinary and cross-sectoral management requirements of wetlands make this issue one of the most challenging, and wetlands constitute today the single most important environmental issue being addressed by the Ugandan government. As part of this effort, the legal frameworks for property rights and local government are being overhauled so as to provide a sounder basis for environmental management in this field. This article analyses the Ugandan approach to wetlands management and the role of property rights and local government in the environmental policy-making process.

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Articles
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Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1993

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References

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22 NWCMP, op. cit., 6–7.

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66 Public Lands (Restriction of Customary Tenure) order, 1969.

67 Law Reform Commission, The Land Reform Decree 1975, Entebbe, 19775, 2.

68 This provision occurs in the Judicature Act, 1962, s. 8(1); Magistrates Courts Act, 1964, s. 15. It appears never to have been used to strike down a customary environmental management practice.

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