@incollection{fdi:010075908, title = {{L}and rights}, author = {{L}avigne {D}elville, {P}hilippe}, editor = {}, language = {{ENG}}, abstract = {{L}and rights define socially recognized modes of access to land and natural resources within a given society. {T}hey are made up of bundles of elementary rights that differ according to the resources concerned. {S}haped by the historical interplay of power, wealth, and identity, they combine variable and dynamic configurations of individual prerogatives and collective regulations. {L}and rights, the principles of justice that legitimize them, and the authorities responsible for their regulation are changing in response to state power, public policies, and market dynamics. {I}n the many contexts that are characterized by a plurality of norms, and where access to land and resources depends on social status, (neo)customary regulations compete with state norms and administrative frameworks, and partially merge with them, reflecting the tensions, conflicts, and negotiations in each society and local modes of state control.}, keywords = {{DROIT} {FONCIER} ; {PROPRIETE} {FONCIERE} ; {CONFLIT} {FONCIER} ; {ANTHROPOLOGIE} {POLITIQUE}}, booktitle = {{T}he international encyclopedia of anthropology}, numero = {}, pages = {3}, address = {{H}oboken}, publisher = {{W}iley}, series = {}, year = {2018}, DOI = {10.1002/9781118924396.wbiea2019}, ISBN = {978-0-470-65722-5}, URL = {https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010075908}, }