Millions of people in the East Asia and Pacific region, including many from ethnic and indigenous groups, lack secure tenure to their land holdings in forestlands. Forestland is a area that has been legally designated as such, and may or may not have forest cover. Tenure insecurity results from various land rights restrictions in such areas, and discourages people from investing in their land and engaging in sustainable land use practices. The challenge is particularly prominent across the East Asia and Pacific region, where many countries have designated significant proportions of their land area as state forestlands.
This report examines the status of land rights in forestlands across ten countries: Cambodia, China, Indonesia, the Lao PDR, Malaysia, Myanmar, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Thailand, and Viet Nam. It compiles scientific evidence to clarify how land tenure interventions affect forest cover, and details good practices on how to enhance the recognition, protection, and formalization of such rights in a socially inclusive and environmentally sustainable manner. The aim is to guide decision-makers, practitioners, and other stakeholders working in the region on forestland tenure recognition and formalization.
Across the ten countries, full ownership or use rights in forestlands can be acquired in Cambodia, China (for 50 years), Indonesia, parts of Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Thailand, and Viet Nam (for 50 years). The Lao PDR is currently revising its regulations to allow this for certain lands. However, the formalization of such rights is advancing slowly throughout the region, except in China, where rights have already been formalized for 180 million hectares of forestland. More limited community forestry schemes, which delegate some use and management rights to communities, are in place in all ten countries.