Property law in the South Island High Country - statutory, not common law leases
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Date
2007
Type
Journal Article
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Abstract
This article examines the statutory, common law, and traditional foundations of property rights in
pastoral leases in order to look at recent changes in government policy regarding the implementation
of the South Island high country land reform. Called tenure review, this land reform divides
Crown land into two distinct forms of tenure – freehold title and full Crown ownership to be managed
for public conservation. Tenure review began inside the bureaucracy of the Department of
Lands (now called Land Information New Zealand, or LINZ). The Crown invited holders of pastoral
rights to enter voluntary negotiations to determine which land would transfer into freehold
ownership, and which would shift into the public conservation estate. In 1998, Parliament granted
statutory authority to the administrative process, and formalised the pre-existing rules.
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