Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013 (also Land Acquisition Act, 2013 or LARR Act [1] or RFCTLARR Act [2]) is an Act of Indian Parliament that regulates land acquisition and lays down the procedure and rules for granting compensation, rehabilitation and resettlement to the affected persons in India.
A 2010 report by the Government of India, on labor whose livelihood depends on agricultural land, claims that, per 2009 data collected across all states in India, the all-India annual average daily wage rates in agricultural occupations ranged between ₹ [22] 53 and 117 per day for men working in farms (US$354 to 780 per year), and between ...
Clinical Establishments (Registration and Regulation) Act: 2010: 23 Land Ports Authority of India Act: 2010: 31 Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act: 2010: 38 Nalanda University Act: 2010: 39 Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act: 2010: 42 National Capital Territory of Delhi Laws (Special provisions) Act: 2011: 5 Coinage Act: 2011: 11 Orissa ...
Women owning land ultimately benefits the household and society as a whole. [8] The most recent advance towards equality in land rights in India was the Hindu Succession Act of 2005. This act aimed to remove the gender discrimination which was present in the Hindu Succession Act, 1956.
The principal acts are the Lands Clauses Consolidation Act 1845 (8 & 9 Vict. c. 18), [30] the Land Compensation Act 1961, the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965, the Land Compensation Act 1973, [31] the Acquisition of Land Act 1981, part IX of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, the Planning and Compensation Act 1991, and the Planning and ...
Land Charges Act 1972: Land Registration Act 1925: Land Registration Act 2002: Law of Property Act 1925: Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act 2022: Metropolitan Houseless Poor Act 1864: Settled Land Acts: Sustainable and Secure Buildings Act 2004: Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996: Vagrancy Act 1824
Independent India's most revolutionary land policy was perhaps the abolition of the Zamindari system (feudal landholding practices). Land-reform policy in India had two specific objectives: "The first is to remove such impediments to increase in agricultural production as arise from the agrarian structure inherited from the past.
An Act to provide for the imposition of a ceiling on vacant land in urban agglomerations, for the acquisition of such land in excess of the ceiling limit, to regulate the construction of buildings on such land and for matters connected therewith, with a view to preventing the concentration of urban land in the hands of a few persons and speculation and profiteering therein and with a view to ...