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Involuntary Resettlement

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Policies and Strategies

R1-79-95

On-line edition: Free of Charge
Hardcopy price: $10.00

Publication Date: August 1995
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ADB's Policy on Involuntary Resettlement was adopted in 1995 and became operational in January 1996. The Policy requires that involuntary resettlement be an integral part of project design, dealt with from the earliest stages of the project cycle.

The Policy aims to

  • avoid involuntary resettlement wherever feasible
  • minimize resettlement where population displacement is unavoidable by exploring all viable project options.

If, nonetheless, individuals or communities must lose their land, means of livelihood, social support systems, or way of life they should be

  • compensated for lost assets and loss of income and livelihood
  • assisted for relocation
  • assisted so that their economic and social future will generally be at least as favorable with the project as without it
  • provided with appropriate land, housing, infrastructure, and other compensation, comparable to the without-project situation
  • fully informed and closely consulted on resettlement and compensation options

The Policy also specifies that lack of formal legal title to land is not a bar to compensation and other assistance. This may apply to a range of people affected, e.g. informal dwellers, land users with traditional or customary rights, squatters or those with adverse possession rights but no formal legal title to land and assets. Appropriate assistance provided to address the needs of the poorest affected persons such as female-headed households, and other vulnerable groups such as indigenous peoples, helps them improve their status.

The Policy further requires that ADB assist the government and other project sponsors to

  • adopt and implement the objectives and principles of the Policy within their own policy, legal, administrative and institutional frameworks
  • build and strengthen developing member countries' (DMC) capacities and national frameworks for resettlement.

Moreover, the Policy requires the government of the borrowing country, or private project sponsor to submit a satisfactory Resettlement Plan with time-bound actions and budgets before loan appraisal. This applies to every project that involves any form of involuntary resettlement, either through

  • physical displacement of people from homes, lands, other assets, resources or services, or
  • loss of income and livelihood

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Contents

  1. Introduction

    1. Projects Involving Displacement of People

    2. Magnitude and Impacts of Population Displacement

    3. Voluntary Migration vs. Involuntary Resettlement

    4. Involuntary Resettlement and the Environment

  2. Review of Involuntary Resettlment Experiences

    1. Experiences of Developing Member Countries (DMCs)

    2. Experience in Bank-financed Projects

    3. Experiences of the World Bank and Other Agencies

      1. World Bank's Experience

      2. Policies of Other Agencies

    4. Resettlement and Local Organizations

  3. Involuntary Resettlement Policy

    1. Rationale

    2. Bank Policy

  4. Implementation Procedures

    1. Initial Social Assessment

    2. Resettlement Plan

    3. Responsibilty

    4. Project Processing

    5. Project Implementation

    6. Application of Policy

    7. Monitoring and Reporting

    8. Resource Implications

  5. Conclusions


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