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5 - Law and lawlessness on the frontier and the problem of bureaucratic inertia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 October 2009

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Summary

The situation of dual authority in the frontier regions, where ownership of land may change not only by commercial contract but by the decisions of the courts leads inevitably to legal confusion at the local level. In the states of the south the Federal State leases land where the local state titles it; these leases, and even simple applications for title – which have no legal validity whatsoever – are negotiated as if they were titles (Gomes 1969). More recently in the states of the north virtually any document issued by the Federal land agency (including tax receipts and farm surveys) are sold in the emerging market for land. Moreover, the body of law governing access to and occupation of land is hugely complex, and the innumerable laws, decree-laws, regulations, instructions, injunctions and ‘explanations’ have never been collated. It is said that in Brazil there are in force some 120,000 laws (Stefannini 1977), and the only one missing is the obligation to obey them.

Quite apart from these legal complexities both Federal and local administrations have proved incapable of controlling the process of occupation of the land. Local land offices were not even equipped with maps of their respective regions, so that title-holders could claim land where it suited them, or extend the boundaries of their claim at will.

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The Struggle for Land
A Political Economy of the Pioneer Frontier in Brazil from 1930 to the Present Day
, pp. 106 - 127
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1981

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