No one asks if the land is idle, once everyone grabs the wasteland, who should the abandoned land be

Mondo Three rural Updated on 2024-02-01

"The land is idle and no one cultivates, and once the wasteland is cleared, everyone grabs it".。For example, there is an idle and abandoned land in the village that no one cultivates, no one cares about it for many years, and it is overgrown with weeds, just like the land that no one wants, when you want to use this idle land again, many villagers will jump out and fight with you and grab it, which will cause disagreements and contradictions.

This is the case in traditional rural areas, and it is difficult to "make you three feet"? Have you ever seen a similar situation happen around you?

In the early 80s in our country, the production was contracted to the households, and the responsibility was assigned to the people, and there was also an upsurge of "opening up the wasteland and growing grain". In the ancient feudal period, there were also large-scale reclamation of wasteland and forest land, and the reclaimed land was used to grow food.

No one asks if the land is idle, once everyone grabs the wasteland, who should the abandoned land belong to?

Who should own the land cleared by the older generation of farmers? The land that farmers have cultivated for decades has been taken back by the village collective, and it is auctioned and leased as the collective property of the village. Land is the "lifeblood" of farmers, and the ownership of the land that farmers have worked hard to clear should not belong to the reclaimers?

Peasants grow grain to provide a solid guarantee for the country's food security. In ancient times, there was such a saying in feudal times:"Under the whole world, all are kings' land, and within the four seas, all are kings' ministers"., which has been passed down to the present day. The ultimate ownership of the land reclaimed by the peasants belongs to the state and the collective.

Arable land is used for agricultural production, and homesteads are used for peasant residences. The nature of land in rural areas is different from that of urban land, and peasants can occupy and use homestead land and cultivated land for a long time within the prescribed scope.

All in all, the real ownership rights of the homesteads, breeding land, cultivated land for agricultural production, and land under the peasants' houses belong to the village collective, and belong to the village collective, not to the individual peasants.

Farmers have cultivated decades of land that has been reclaimed, abandoned, and left unattended, and over time, they always think that they belong to their own inherent property. In fact, the village collective has the right to take it back at any time, and the land belongs to the state, and there is no real meaning"terra nullius".

Disputes and contradictions often occur in rural areas because of land, between villagers and villagers, and between villagers and village collectives. In order to ensure the rational use of cultivated land and avoid all kinds of disputes and contradictions.

The state has implemented the policy of "land rights confirmation" in rural areas, realizing the "unification of household property" for farmers, and specific household registrations correspond to specific cultivated landIncreasing the number of people does not increase the land, and reducing the number of people does not reduce the landIt is equivalent to the cultivated land in the hands of the peasants, and the legitimate rights and interests of the peasants have been effectively protected.

Assuming that there is no disputed land in the Land Title Confirmation Scheme, even if a villager has cultivated the land for decades or even longer, the ownership of such land does not belong to the farmer who cleared the land, and has nothing to do with the length of time the land has been occupied, and the village collective has the right to take back this type of land at any time and return it to the village collective.

Since the implementation of the policy of "Land Ownership", it is necessary to have the right to contract and manage land, and the corresponding land belongs to farmers.

If a piece of land in the village is idle, barren and uncultivated, and the peasant friends think that it is "terra nullius", and want to make use of this piece of land, they must apply to the village committee, or pay a certain lease and contract fee to the village collective, so as to ensure the right to operate this piece of wasteland and prevent unnecessary losses and troubles to individuals.

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