The Land Policy Component. In Victoria land policy inspired on the need to have closer settlement of private owned parcels and properties and Crown land pieces which in 1999 composed of 70 000 parcels. The policies also are driven on the need to have sustainable development. In Victoria LAS policy framework require imaginative approaches in relation to the legislative framework of separate Acts which deals issues like transfer of land, sale of land, valuation , planning, land tax, heritage protection, stamp duty, pollution subdivisions, building and mining.
The marine environment in the state on the other hand is seen as being badly served with a disconnected legislative frameworks that is characterized by having large gaps with regards to legislative framework. There is a plan to title fresh water with full support of the national government the aim being to establish a national water market (Wallace, 2005). The Land Information Component. The state of Victoria has full knowledge that land information is a very important commodity by its own right.
Most of the land information can easily be obtained on the Web that provides linkage of basic title and information searching systems that are being retailed by contracted providers. In Victoria VicMap is seen to be a very important component of the state spatial data infrastructure which provides continuity and systematization. The fundamental datasets provided include geodesy, property (including hydrography, cadastre and transport), image, address and administration (local government and electoral) boundaries.
These are all available online and are usually delivered through private resellers. The maps do not give details on soils. The department of sustainability and environment is in charge of issues of privacy, risk, ownership, copyright, management authorization (administrative and legal), maintenance forms and access, this being done according to international standards including metadata standards. Access of land information in Victoria is provided at a cost. Land tenure The Victoria property law is English and thus the English case law is used in the courts.
The basic property is a derivative of almost all English Law of Property Act of 1925. Origins of the feudal system are seen in estate scheme where ownership through freehold tenure is still being held of the Crown. Leasehold, freehold and Crown leases and licenses are the common tenures in Victoria. While these hold concept are still being held by the courts of the land but land ownership logic practically based on the Torres systems of registration. While the Torrens system are applied are applied across Australia, there is variation in the details.
In Victoria there is a lot of reliance on possession as a title source which overrides a registered title. This is a reflection of the surveying history in the state and the frequency at which nonconformity between surveyed and a title boundary is experienced. Due to reliance on possession as being the source of the title for part or whole parcels, the state is able achieve land transaction efficiency and this allows buyers and lenders to be confident that the land under inspection is the land that is received during settlement.
In this state check surveys are rarely practiced. Background on Philippines Land Administration System The whole country of Philippine covers an approximate area of 300,000 square kilometers with about 53% of the land being reserved for forest cover, national parks and minerals with the remaining 47% is what is described as being alienable and disposable land. The population of the country is about 85 million 60% of which lives in the urban areas (Williamson et al 1998). There are three major issues which have been recognized as stagnating land development in Philippines: scarcity of land that can be used in urban development; the urban land is occupied informally with informal land market being very active and the formal rural land market is at a stand still.
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