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227). This Act makes provision with respect to a wide variety of matters regarding land in Uganda such as land tenure, customary ownerhip, grant of land in freehold, management of communal land, management of land by the Uganda Land Commission, land-use control and functioning of land tribunals.
4 Types of Land Tenure Systems In Uganda Explained - Canaan Sites Ltd. Land ownership in Uganda is based on four tenure systems: Freehold, Leasehold, Mailo, and Customary. The tenure systems vary docHubly, as detailed in The Land Act 1998.
The Uganda National Land Policy is a national policy of the Republic of Uganda whose main goal is to ensure an efficient, equitable and optimal utilization and management of Ugandas land resources for poverty reduction, wealth creation and overall socio-economic development.
THE LAND ACT. Commencement: 2 July, 1998. An Act to provide for the tenure, ownership and management of land; to amend and consolidate the law relating to tenure, ownership and management of land; and to provide for other related or incidental matters.
The policy provides direction to all sectors that are affected by climate change to facilitate adaptation and mitigation and to strengthen coordination of efforts amongst all sectors to build an overarching national development process that is more resilient.
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Uganda has four major tenure types that the leg- islation aims to reform. The Act recognises these four land tenure forms:Customary (communal), mailo, freehold and leasehold.
Under Public Land Tenure, the government owns land and has the right to lease it to any company, organization or individuals on specific terms and covenants, in most cases, for business, urban use, as well as refugees.
Because of high poverty rates, changing socio-economic and political circumstances and demographic growth, traditional coping strategies are being lost and unsustainable land management practices, including overgrazing, over-cultivation, and excessive wood collection among other practices have become prevalent (UNDP,

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