Land Tenure System in Papua New Guinea
In Papua New Guinea ownership to land falls under two main categories and there are the Alienated Land and the Customary Land .
1.0 Alienated Land
The term " Alienated Land " refers to land that was acquired from the Customary Land Owners initially and now owned and administered by the State through leasehold and Freehold interest.
- A sudden increase in demand for land in these Urban Centres brought about mainly by the current trend of increased economic activities in the Provinces.
- The plantation sector in particular, once the backbone of the PNG's economy, could now require adequate attention and readdressing by the Government of its problem or shortfalls in order to get it back on the recovery trend.
2.0 Customary Land
The term " Customary Land " refers to Land that is not state land and is owned by the Indigenous People of Papua New Guinea whose ownership rights and interest is regulated by their customs.
(a) Patrilineal
In this Land Tenure practice the ownership rights to land is inherited from the male ancestor and pasts down the male lineage.
The female members of the clan have user rights whilst living with the parents and when they are married they move on and settle with their husband and use the husband's Clan land.
(b) Matrilineal
This is opposite of the Patrilineal where the ownership rights to land is inherited from the female ancestor and pasts down the female lineage.
The male members of the clan have user rights to land whilst living with the parents and when married they move on and settle and use their wife's Clan land.
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Customary Land comprises of 97% of the total land mass in Papua New Guinea and it continues to sustain the rural subsistence economy, whilst vast track of it mainly in the inaccessible inter-land is either left unutilized or partly used for timber and logging activities, mines and petroleum purposes.
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However, when an interest for development is shown for a particular piece or parcel of land, then the Land Act and other Land related Acts are called into play by the Government to ensure a legal interest is created and properly registered.
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