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2. Alden, W. (2011), Whose Land, Is It? The Status of Customary Land Tenure in Cameroon. Center for Environment and Development, Etoa-Meki, Yaoundé, Cameroon, in collaboration with FERN Office UK. 3. Alden, W. (2012), Customary Land Tenure in the Modern World, Right to Resources in Crisis: Reviewing the Fate of Customary Land Tenure in Africa. Brief 1 of 5. 4. Alden, W. (2018), Collective Land Ownership in the 21 st Century: Overview of Global Trends. Land, vol. 7, Iss. 68. Van Vollenhoven Institute, Leiden Law School, P.O. Box 9520, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands. 5. Anne-Gaelle, J. (2013), Land registration in Cameroon. In: Focus on Land in Africa: Placing Land Rights at the Heart of Development. Brief – Cameroon. 6. Bongba, E. and Tanto, R. (2019), Land Disputes and Family Ties in Cameroon: Debating the Possibilities of Reconciliation. In: Green, MC. (Ed). Law, Religion, and Human Flourishing in Africa . Stellenbosch Conference-RAP. 7. Diaw, M. and Njomkap, J. (1998), La Terre et le Droit: Une Anthropologie Institutionnelle de la Tenure Coutumière, de la Jurisprudence et du Droit Fonciers chez les Peuples Bantous et Pygmées du Cameroun Méridional Forestier. Inades-Formation, Yaoundé. 8. Diaw, M. (2009), Elusive Meanings: Decentralization, Conservation and Local democracy. Chapter 3, QXD. 9. Egbe, S. (1997), Forest Tenure and Access to Forest Resources in Cameroon. Forest Participation Series No.6. International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), London. 10. Fosting, J. (1995), Compétition Foncière et Stratégies d’Occupation des Terres en pays Bamiléké. In: Blanc-Pamard C. (Ed.). Dynamique des Systèmes Agraires : Terre, Terroir, Territoire : Les Tensions Foncières. Paris: ORSTOM. 11. Kaspa, N. (2019), Gender, Decision-Making on Land Ownership and Indigenous Rights in Cameroon: Searching for a Balance in Law. International Journal of Science and Research, (IJSR), volume 9, issue, 12. 12. Larson, A. (1998), Democratic Decentralization in the Forestry Sector: Lessons Learned from Africa, Asia and Latin America. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. 13. Manor, J. (1999), The Political Economy of decentralization. World Bank, Washington DC. 14. Manor, J. (2005), User Committees: A Potentially Damaging Second Wave of Decentralization? In: Ribot, J. and Larson, M. (Ed.) Democratic Decentralization through a Natural Resource Lens . Routledge, London and New York. 15. Matovu, G. (2008), Issues Relating to Developing Capacities for Effectively Implementing Decentralization Policies in Africa. Paper Presented at the Ministerial Conference on Leadership Capacity Building for Decentralized Governance and Poverty Reduction in Africa. Palais des Congres, Yaoundé, Cameroon. 16. Melo, M. and Rezende, F. (2004), Decentralization and Governance in Brazil. In: Tulchin, J. and Selee, A. (ed.), Decentralization and Democratic Governance in Latin America. Woodrow Wilson Center Report on the Americas No. 12. 17. Minang, P. et al. (2019), Evolution of Community Forestry in Cameroon: An Innovation Ecosystems Perspective. Ecology and Society, vol. 24, Iss. 1. 18. Namnso, B. et al. (2014), Land Ownership in Nigeria: Historical Development, Current Issues and Future Expectations. Journal of Environment and Earth Science. Volume 4, no. 21, pp. 182-188. 19. Nguiffo, S. et al. (2009), The Influence of Historical and Contemporary Land Laws on Indigenous Peoples’ Land Rights in Cameroon. In : Land Rights and the Forest Peoples of Africa: Historical, Legal and Anthropological Perspectives. Forest Peoples Programmes, Stratford Road, United Kingdom. 20. Ribot, J. (2002), Democratic Decentralization of Natural Resources: Institutionalizing Popular Participation. World Resources Institute, Washington, DC. 21. Rosset, P. et al. (2006), Promises Land: Competing Visions of Agrarian Reform. Institute for Food and Development Policy. Food First, Oakland, CA, USA; Borras, S. (2007), Pro-Poor Land Reform: A Critique. The University of Ottawa, ON, USA. 22. Tamasang, C. (2007), Community Forest Management Entities as Effective Tools for Local- Level Participation under Cameroonian Law: A Case Study of Kilum/Ijim Mountain Forest. A Thesis Defended for the Partial Fulfilment of Requirements for Obtaining Ph.D. in Law. Faculty of Laws and Political Science, University of Yaoundé II-Soa. 23. World Bank Document, (2012), Cameroon, the Path to Fiscal Decentralization: Opportunities and Challenges. The Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Report for Africa. Report No. 63369- CM. The Decentralization Paradigm: Pathway for Communities’ Rights to Land in Cameroon © 2023 Global Journals 1 Year 2023 14 Global Journal of Science Frontier Research Volume XXIII Issue ersion I VI ( H )

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