Conference Agenda
The conference agenda provides an overview and details of sessions. In order to view sessions on a specific day or for a certain room, please select an appropriate date or room link. You may also select a session to explore available abstracts and download papers and presentations.
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Session Overview | |
Location: MC 7-860 |
Date: Tuesday, 26/Mar/2019 | |
8:30am - 10:00am |
01-13: Formalizing customary tenure: How to make it work? Location: MC 7-860 Chair: Margaret Rugadya, Ford Foundation, Uganda Catalyzing Innovation: Lessons from Uganda: Innovating land governance in predominantly customary settings. 1: GIZ, Uganda; 2: ZOA, Uganda Evaluation of the land inventory approach for securing tenure of lawful and bona fide occupants on private mailo land in Uganda 1: Responsible Land Policy in Uganda (RELAPU), GIZ; 2: Department of Geomatics and Land Management, Makerere University, Uganda Land use Policy; implementing the Physical planning Act, in the context of Malawi land reform program implementation Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Malawi The role of customary authorities in land administration: Examples from Tanzania and Ethiopia NIRAS, Ethiopia |
10:30am - 12:00pm |
02-13: Gender aspects of land tenure Location: MC 7-860 Chair: Victoria Stanley, World Bank, United States of America Land reform and child health in the Kyrgyz republic 1: International Food Policy Research Institute, United States of America; 2: Georgia Tech, United States of America Gender gaps in forest tenure reforms in Peru: The impact of expectations on the household incomes of native communities Universidad de Lima, Peru Land joint titling and its effects on household welfare in Vietnam World Bank, United States of America Gender differences in housing ownership in Dhaka, Bangladesh World Bank, United States of America |
2:00pm - 3:30pm |
03-13: Drawing policy advice from land data analysis Location: MC 7-860 Chair: Hamady Diop, NEPAD, South Africa Predicting deprivations in housing and basic services from space in slums of Dhaka 1: University of Massachusetts Boston, United States of America; 2: World Bank, United States of America; 3: Inter American Development Bank, United States of America; 4: GiSAT, Czech Republic International collaboration: capturing the impact of emerging trends Columbia University, United States of America The effects of agricultural income on Internally Displaced Persons: Evidence from Colombia Universidad Icesi, Colombia The consequences of increasing block tariffs, magnitude and distribution of electricity and water subsidies for households in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America |
3:45pm - 5:15pm |
04-13: Land rights regularization and common property resources Location: MC 7-860 Chair: David Ameyaw, International Center for Evaluation and Development, Kenya Identifying best practices for benefit sharing at the jurisdictional scale in relation to emission reduction programs 1: Michigan State University, United States of America; 2: Bioversity International / World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), France; 3: University of Papua, Indonesia How Does Scarcity Affect Extraction of Resources? A study about land use as a common-pool resource dilemma using survey and field-experimental data collected in northern Namibia University of Marburg, Germany Impact of land certification on cash crop expansion in Southwest China Leibniz Universität Hannover, Germany Forest carbon supply in Nepal: Evidence from a choice experiment 1: Portland State University, United States of America; 2: Indian Statistical Institute, India; 3: Smart Start Evaluation and Research, United States of America; 4: Forest Action, Nepal |
Date: Wednesday, 27/Mar/2019 | |
8:30am - 10:00am |
05-13: Providing policy advice through applied research Location: MC 7-860 Chair: Ammar Alhamadi, Dubai Land Department, United Arab Emirates Beyond climate change: how tenure reform aggravated grassland degradation in north china 1: University of California Davis, United States of America; 2: Renmin University of China, China Unrecognized opportunities for pastoral tenure: Re-framing variability, mobility, and flexibility University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States of America An exploratory sequential mixed methods approach to understanding the correlation of land use regulations on residential property values in Windhoek, Namibia Namibia University of Science and Technology, Namibia |
10:30am - 12:00pm |
06-13: Providing policy advice through applied research Location: MC 7-860 Chair: Anna Locke, Overseas Development Institute, United Kingdom Governance challenges in sub-Saharan Africa: the case of Land Guards and land protection in Ghana Ghana Revenue Authority, Ghana Assessing institutional governance in balancing food production and environmental protection in urban wetlands of Kigali/Rwanda and tropical Kilombero floodplain/Tanzania. A comparative analysis World Bank Group, Rwanda Growth effects of banking development on agriculture and industrial GDP in Sub-Saharan Africa University of Westminster, United Kingdom Land related human rights in Pakistan: improving land tenancy as a pathway for agriculture development and food security Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), Thailand |
2:00pm - 3:30pm |
07-13: Linking global issue to local reality on the commons Location: MC 7-860 Chair: Gerardo Segura Warnholtz, World Bank, United States of America Consequential trends in global recognition of community-based forest tenure from 2002-2017 Rights and Resources Initiative, United States of America From lessons learnt to future options for global forest governance European Forest Institute (EFI), Germany Evidence on biodiversity conservation impacts: assessing theories, approaches, and outcomes from community engagement 1: Arizona State University, United States of America; 2: Chemonics, International Producing useable knowledge for sustainable land governance: Potential contributions from land systems science 1: Global Land Programme/University of Bern, Centre for Development and Environment (CDE), Switzerland; 2: University of Bern, Centre for Development and Environment (CDE), Switzerland |
3:45pm - 5:15pm |
08-13: Land and post-conflict: the case of Colombia Location: MC 7-860 Chair: Mike Mora, Organization of American States, United States of America First social then legal: what 902 decree – law changed. Follow-up on the Colombian Peace Agreements and land tenure issues II Colombia Rural, Colombia Between over-innovation and business as usual: another look at the reasons for delay in the implementation of the rural dimension of the Final Agreement in two departments of Colombia (Caquetá and Putumayo). 1: CIRAD, France; Network for applied research on Transitions in Latinamerica and the Caribbean; 2: Foundation CERSUR, Colombia, Network for applied research on Transitions in Latinamerica and the Caribbean Land markets, social networks and land-grabbing in Colombia. George Mason University, United States of America Effects of land tenure formalization on illicit crop production in Colombia WORLD BANK, Colombia Extended models from the Colombian LADM Profile as support of Territorial Planning 1: IGAC, Colombia; 2: BSF Swissphoto, Colombia; 3: BSF Swissphoto, Spain |
Date: Thursday, 28/Mar/2019 | |
10:30am - 12:00pm |
10-13: Legal pluralism and tenure reforms: Has there been progress? Location: MC 7-860 Chair: Richard Gaynor, Millennium Challenge Corporation, United States of America Stakeholder narratives on tenure transformation in Morocco Georgetown University, United States of America The heavy burden of the past - The political economy of rural reform in Colombia. George Mason University, United States of America Real change or paper tigers? An assessment of legal support for community property independent, Kenya |
Date: Friday, 29/Mar/2019 | |
9:00am - 10:30am |
12-08: Working with the Private Sector: bridging the gap between the Public, Private and Civil Society Sectors to catalyze innovation in Land Markets Location: MC 7-860 Working with the Private Sector: bridging the gap between the Public, Private and Civil Society Sectors to catalyze innovation in Land Markets Georgetown University, School of Continuing Education, United States of America |
11:00am - 12:30pm |
13-08: Urban data collection tools and approaches Location: MC 7-860 Urban data collection tools and approaches 1: Cadasta Foundation, United States of America; 2: Tata Trusts, India; 3: ESRI; 4: Housing and Urban Development Department, Government of Odisha State, India |
1:30pm - 3:00pm |
14-08: Women's land rights conceptual framework Location: MC 7-860 Women's land rights conceptual framework tool Resource Equity, United States of America |
Contact and Legal Notice · Contact Address: Conference: 20th Land and Poverty Conference |
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