FMF part of a larger global network advancing property rights
FMF is one of Atlas Network’s more-than-450 global partners working to restore and strengthen property rights, in accordance with Sir John Templeton’s recognition of their essential nature to human freedom and flourishing. The work that FMF has undertaken with its Khaya Lam project is so substantial that it was nominated alongside five other outstanding nominees for the prestigious $100,000 Templeton Freedom Award in 2015. The winner, Acton Institute’s Poverty, Inc. documentary about the hazards of the international development industry, was selected and presented with its award at Atlas Network’s 2015 Liberty Forum & Freedom Dinner on Nov. 11–12, 2015 in New York City.
Although FMF did not win the 2015 Templeton Freedom Award, its status as a finalist in itself speaks volumes about the quality and impact of its work. More than 60 organizations applied for the Templeton Freedom Award, all of them doing important work around the world. In addition to the Acton Institute, based in Grand Rapids, Mich., the other nominees included: Center for Dissemination of Economic Knowledge for Freedom (CEDICE Freedom) in Caracas, Venezuela, for its Watchdog for Freedom and Democracy Project, which brings together three “observatories” that monitor the state of individual rights in Venezuela; the Institute for Justice in Arlington, Va., for its strategic research program that makes a rigorous data-driven case for its areas of advocacy that helps win court cases and sets new legal precedent; the Institute of Public Affairs in Melbourne, Australia, for its Repeal the Carbon Tax Campaign ended this poorly conceived and costly failure of an emissions law; and the Tax Foundation in Washington, D.C., for its State Business Tax Climate Index, which ranks the 50 states by measuring the elements of each state’s tax system that are important to all types of business.
FMF’s Khaya Lam land titling project is part of a broad global movement to advance property rights and free markets. In addition to its fellow Templeton Freedom Award nominees, FMF is joined in its property rights work by such Atlas Network partners as Liberty Institute in New Delhi, India. It developed an innovative project that provides villagers with GPS devices and satellite mapping technology in order to prove their farming claims to the government and establish legal title to their own ancestral lands. This story is brought to life in a recent public television documentary, India Awakes, produced by Atlas Network partner Free to Choose Media.
In addition to satellite technology, Atlas Network think tank partners are using other innovative new techniques to make reliable land titling a reality in even the most challenging places. For example, in Honduras, where some believe uncertainty in property rights accounts for as much as 4 percent of their prohibitive loan interest rates, Atlas Network partner Fundación Eléutera has worked during the past year to help government leaders transform an ongoing and costly land titling digitalization effort by using blockchain technology, an encrypted peer-to-peer networking system. If successful, this decentralized approach could mean the end of corruption and the beginning of a mass unleashing of human potential through secure and predictably adjudicated property rights.
Think tank work on strengthening property rights is not confined to developing nations, however. One of former U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s key market reforms was the privatization of public housing, one of the economic ideas that had been championed by the publications and scholars of Atlas Network partner the Institute of Economic Affairs.
“Some three million housing units have moved from public to private hands since 1979, changing the balance of ownership,” wrote the late John Blundell, Atlas Network’s past president and board member, in his intellectual biography of Thatcher. “For the first time in generations people reliant on the state to control and regulate their homes had the freedom to make their own decisions. They could paint the walls without filling in a form and repair a leaking roof without the council having to do it for them. ... Ownership invested them with a dignity never experienced before.”
By protecting property rights, FMF through its Khaya Lam land titling project and these other projects by Atlas Network partners all strengthen individual liberty and prosperity.
Pictured at top: Mrs. Maria Mothupi, who is 99 years old, has never experienced living in her own home or living in a home legally owned by her family. She was two years old when the 1913 Land Act banned land ownership by black people in South Africa, and experienced firsthand the devastation this evil legislation caused for South Africa’ s black population. This photo shows Mrs. Mothupi a few minutes after she received her title deed, signifying that she finally owns her house and land after all these years. The satisfaction this brings her is readily apparent in her smile and the look in her eyes. When asked what the title deed means to her, she replied, “I can sleep well now.” She elaborated that she is now able to leave a legacy to her children when she passes away by legally leaving her home to them in her will — something she had not previously had the legal right to do.