Property rights for social inclusion: migrant strategies for securing land and livelihoods in Papua New Guinea

Type Journal Article - Asia Pacific Viewpoint
Title Property rights for social inclusion: migrant strategies for securing land and livelihoods in Papua New Guinea
Author(s)
Volume 50
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2009
Page numbers 29-42
URL https://espace.curtin.edu.au/bitstream/handle/20.500.11937/41640/202287_202287.pdf?sequence=2
Abstract
This paper examines the broad range of informal land transactions and
arrangements migrants are entering into with customary landowners to gain access to
customary land for export cash cropping in the oil palm belt of West New Britain, Papua
New Guinea. Whilst these arrangements can provide migrants with relatively secure access to
land, there are instances of migrants losing their land rights. Typically, the land tenure
arrangements of migrants with more secure access to land are within a framework of property
rights for social inclusion whereby customary landowners’ inalienable rights to land are
preserved and the ‘outsider’ becomes an ‘insider’ with ongoing use rights to the land.
Through socially embedding land transactions in place-based practices of nonmarket
exchange, identities of difference are eroded as migrants assume identities as part of their
host groups. This adaptability of customary land tenure and its capacity to accommodate
large migration in-flows and expanding commodity production undermines the argument
common amongst proponents of land reform that customary tenure is static and inflexible.
Before such claims are heeded, there must be more detailed empirical investigations of the
diverse range of land tenure regimes operating in areas of the country experiencing high rates
of immigration.

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