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Land management professionals tend to agree, that, taking into consideration the results and effects of land reforms (land fragmentation, abandonment of land, etc.) in different CEEC and CIS countries, there is an increasing recognition of the need to perform a "second wave" of land reform in the said countries, supporting the "rational use of rural areas through appropriate land management tools and mechanisms" (Tonder Report 2004). One of such land management tools is land banking, which is defined by J. Damen as "the structural acquisition and temporary management of land in rural areas by an impartial State agency, with the purpose to redistribute and/or lease out this land with a view to improve the agricultural structure and/or to re-locate the land for other purposes with a general public interest"(DAMEN 2004). For the purpose of this article we will basically adhere to this definition of the said concept. In the key international workshop on land banking in 2004, Denmark, organized by the Danish Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Fisheries and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) it was pointed out that "land banks are used to play a catalytic role in the land market, assembling and providing better shaped plots and parcels to farmers in land consolidation projects, implementing and facilitating early retirement schemes, and enabling other types of 'land demanding' projects providing nature and environmental protection, afforestation and infrastructure" (Tonder Report 2004). The said concepts are fully applicable to Lithuania, which is terminating the process of land restitution and prepares for the second stage of the land reform, involving advanced land management techniques. Lithuania already has certain experience in land consolidation as first field projects are accomplished, the National Land Consolidation Strategy is adopted (Government Resolution no. 81, dated 23 January 2008) and the legal framework for land consolidation is functioning. Thus, following the example of other European countries, the effective land banking system would be an important complement to the land management system in Lithuania. As it may be seen from the study on land banking in Lithuania, the Lithuanian land bank or fund could have the following main objectives: (i) create a more competitive farm structure by reducing fragmentation and scaling up of mainly small and medium size commercial farms (5-50 hectares); (ii) address abandonment of agricultural land by revitalising of farming or reassigning of function depending on soil quality and location of the land and (iii) tune the land use structure in an integrated way to future and present infrastructural needs on local, regional and national levels (VAN HALL LARENSTEIN 2009). (fragment of text)
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Bibliografia
- Conclusion 2007. Conclusion of the Main Committee P-35(113)'1, dated 5 December 2007, regarding the amendments to the Law on Land Database PEG, http://www.peg-online.net/prva-stran
- DAMEN J. 2004. Land banking in The Netherlands in the context of land consolidation, Report prepared for the International Workshop: Land Banking / Land Funds as an Instrument for Improved Land Management for CEEC and CIS, organized by the Danish Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Fisheries, Directorate for Food, Fisheries and Agri Business, Land Consolidation Division (DFFE) and FAO/UN - 17-20 March 2004, Tonder, Denmark; www.fao.org/regional/seur/events/tonder/docs/Netherlands_paper.pdf
- FSS 2007. Farm structure in Lithuania (Statistics explained), Eurostat results of the European Union (EU) Farm structure survey (FSS) 2007, epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu
- President Decrees 2010. Decrees of the President of the Republic of Lithuania no. 1K-388, 1K-389, 1K-390, dated 9 June 2010
- President's office 2010. Press release of the Office of the President of the Republic of Lithuania, dated 9 June 2010, www.president.lt
- Rulings 2003-2010. Rulings of the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Lithuania, dated 30 September 2003, 5 July 2007, 23 November 2007, 30 June 2008, 2 March 2009, 26 February 2010
- Statistical Yearbook 2010. Statistics Lithuania, Vilnius, Lithuania, p. 621-644, www.stat.gov.lt/en.
- Tonder Report 2004. Report of the International Workshop: Land Banking / Land Funds as an Instrument for Improved Land Management for CEEC and CIS, organized by the Danish Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Fisheries, Directorate for Food, Fisheries and Agri Business, Land Consolidation Division (DFFE) and FAO/UN - 17-20 March 2004, Tonder, Denmark; www.fao.org/regional/seur/events/tonder/tonderproc_EN.HTM
- VAN HALL LARENSTEIN 2009. Evaluation study on the impact of the Land Fund on the activity "Land Consolidation" under the measure 8 "Infrastructure Related to the Development and Adaptation of Agriculture and Forestry" of the Rural Development Programme of Lithuania for 2007-2013, Van Hall Larenstein (The Netherlands) in cooperation with DLG - Government Service for Land and Water Management (The Netherlands), December 2009. Study was prepared by F. van Holst, T. Versinskas, M. Ambar and J. Spijkerboer. English version of the study may be found on the website of the National Land Service at: www.nzt.lt
- VON ARNIM and LANGHOLZ 2009. Von Arnim H-E., Langholz T., Findings of the Mission to the Ministry of Agriculture of Lithuania and its subordinate institutions - the National Land Service and the State Land Survey Institute, 23-25 September 2009. English version of the report may be found on the website of the National Land Service at: www.nzt.lt
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