Why good land governance matters for global climate policy
30 January 2026
Did you know that less than one percent of Nationally Determined Contributions, or NDCs, include land-related indicators? In fact, of the 165+ climate action plans created under the Paris Agreement, only one-third mention land tenure at all. The omission reflects a broader disconnect between climate commitments and the land governance measures needed to secure the rights of communities who, for generations, have stewarded forests and other ecologically critical landscapes.
Land Matters: Applying a do-no-harm approach in humanitarian and development interventions
12 February 2026
February 12th, 2026, 15:00-16:30 CET
Land Portal Foundation
Norwegian Refugee Council
Netherlands Enterprise & Development Agency
700+ indicators
Statistical data aggregated from trusted providers
77,000+ resources
Searchable library of open access publications
Countries
Uninhabited by permanent settlers until European colonization, the Mauritian islands were first claimed by the Dutch before falling under French and later British control. Since French occupation the economy was dominated by sugar plantations worked with slave and contract labour.
As the price of sugar fluctuated land prices fell, enabling former indentured labourers to acquire portions of land. However, most of the Creole population descended from enslaved Africans has remained disproportionately marginalized. Today independent Mauritius is regarded as an economic success story – an "African tiger" with a more diversified economy, but closer analysis reveals the human and environmental costs of growth oriented economic development strategies.
South Africa's land governance landscape bears the marks of its challenging historical path, moving from an era of colonial control and land seizure, and then ‘apartheid’ policies of racial separation and forced removals, to heightened aspirations for transformation following the democratic transition in 1994. With only 11% of its 122 000 000 km² land surface being arable, of which just 28% receives adequate rainfall, the country faces significant ecological constraints. These natural limitations are compounded by profound social and economic inequality—a legacy of centuries of discriminatory policies that systematically dispossessed the Black majority. Today, South Africa navigates a complex terrain, weighing constitutional mandates and popular demands for land reform against economic practicalities, as it works to address historical wrongs and implement an effective land reform programme that serves all citizens.
Issues
Forests and woodlands provide livelihoods for many communities who rely on timber, firewood, building materials, non-wood forest products, fodder, food, medical plants, and water. According to FAO, more than 2.6 billion people depend on forests and their products and services which are mostly used informally. Despite the importance of forest tenure reform, it has not received enough attention. Forest tenure and property rights determine who owns and manages forest resources.
The SDG Land Tracker provides easy access to official data and information on all land-specific SDG indicators. It concisely explains the indicators, why they are important, and tracks progress.





