NATIONAL CAMPAIGN FOR REGULARIZATION OF QUILOMBO LAND
QUILOMBOL@ www.cohre.org/quilombos
Editorial
No.8 october 2005
Quilombos
INCRA alters regulations for the titling For activists, technical assessors and civil society entities who are involved in the defense of Quilombo rights, now is a delicate moment. Care must be taken when predicting the future effects of the changes proposed by the INCRA in the processes of recognizing communities and judicial contestations of administrative procedures. The suspension of the effects of Document 19 from the Palmares Cultural Foundation and the questioning of the Technical Report on the recognition of the Silva family, together with the motion of unconstitutionality brought forth by the Brazilian political party PFL give an idea about the actual dimension of the conflicting interests that are involved in the recognition and regularization processes of Quilombo lands. In this scenario, COHRE shares information and broadens the analysis of the consequences of this new information in a dynamic process, subject to many contestations. It is an effort to intensify the ability to monitor civil society and social movements in order to achieve land regularization goals.
The land titling process for Quilombo communities now has new regulations. One of the changes included in the procedure is the necessity of an anthropological study of the area to be titled and the possibility of dispossession for the sake of social interests in cases where the title of ownership to the Quilombo territory is not invalid due to nullification, forfeiture, fines or proven disuse. Regulation no. 20, published by the INCRA in Official Diary no. 185 on 26/9/05, has replaced the old regulation (Regulation no. 16). Now that Regulation 16 has been revoked, all administrative titling actions that were in motion, regardless of the stage at which they were, are now to be governed according to the new regulation. Procedures that have already been completed and that comply with the new rules will be approved. Regulation no. 20 regulates the procedures for the identification, recognition, delimitation, demarcation, titling and registration of Quilombo territories. In compliance with the INCRA, after the edition of Decree 4,887/03 it was necessary to revise the internal procedures and regulations found in the various legislations dealing with private property dispossession and agrarian reform in order to find and adapt new ways to streamline the regularization process of Quilombo territories. For the new procedure, the Technical Report on Identification and Delimitation will be composed of seven documents: anthropological reports, descriptive maps and layouts, family registration, registration of presumed title holders, official research on former land titles, evaluation of overlays including conservation, national security, bordering lands, Navy properties and public, federal, state and city lands. The
report must also be technically conclusive. The anthropological study called for in the new regulation has an interdisciplinary nature and must analyze the anthropological, historical, economic and social characteristics of the areas. It must also identify the elements that define the territory of the communities, such as housing and religion, the lands necessary for physical, economical, social and cultural reproduction and the areas that contain indispensable natural resources for subsistence and preservation of customs, traditions, culture and leisure. The method of dispossession for the sake of social interest included in the new regulation is found in article 184 of the Federal Constitution for properties that do not fulfill their social function. In these cases, compensation for the land is paid with land titles from the agrarian debt, and for the benefactors it is paid with money. The Constitution also calls for dispossession in cases where there is the necessity to preserve Brazilian cultural sites, as stated in article 216, section 1. In the following editions, Quilombo@ COHRE will publish further commentary on the implications of Regulation 20/2005.