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 6-100 |
Date: Tuesday, 26/Mar/2019 | |
8:30am - 10:00am |
01-06: Using data systems to increase accountability Location: MC 6-100 Chair: Michael Taylor, International Land Coalition, Italy Democratizing the data revolution: bringing local perspectives to the surface Land Portal Foundation, Netherlands, The Capturing data gaps: comparative study on availability of land data in Africa 1: Land Portal Foundation, Netherlands, The; 2: People, Land and Rural Development, Kenya The role of people-centered data in land governance monitoring: preliminary results from the Dashboard Initiative 1: International Land Coalition; 2: International Land Coalition, CIRAD Developing a country stakeholder strategy for the global property right perception survey (Prindex) International Center for Evaluation and Development, Kenya Rwanda land registration is complete – now what? the view of an NGO. 1: Rwanda Initiative for Sustainable Development (RISD), Rwanda; 2: Department for International Development (DFID), Rwanda |
10:30am - 12:00pm |
02-06: Indonesia's 'one map' policy: Does it live up to its potential? Location: MC 6-100 Chair: Jill Pike, Millennium Challenge Corporation, United States of America Governance effectiveness evaluation and cost benefit analysis of one map policy delivery institutions at the sub-national level in Indonesia 1: World Resources Institute (WRI) Indonesia; 2: Geospatial Information Agency (BIG) of the Government of Republic of Indonesia Mapping indigenous land: lesson learned from One Map Initiative in Indonesia World Resources Institute Indonesia, Indonesia Towards prosperity and sustainability: The progress of social forestry implementation in Indonesia 1: WRI Indonesia, Indonesia; 2: Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies, Sweden; 3: Coordinating Ministry of Economic Affairs, Indonesia |
2:00pm - 3:30pm |
03-06: Land policy to improve agricultural land use Location: MC 6-100 Chair: Wordsworth Odame Larbi, FAO, Ethiopia Can group farms outperform individual family farms? empirical insights from India School of Environment, Education and Development, University of Manchester, UK The effect of land sizes and land holdings on “transitions” in and out of income poverty in Uganda. 1: Ford Foundation, United States of America; 2: Associates Research Trust, Uganda Land as the enabling asset on a value chain for rural development in Colombia's rural reform Ministerio de Agricultura y Desarrollo Rural, Colombia Land tenure regularisation for sustainable urban and agriculture development in Rwanda AGRA, Kenya |
3:45pm - 5:15pm |
04-06: Kenya's land policy reforms: Did they deliver? Location: MC 6-100 Chair: John Bugri, KNUST, Ghana Land policy implementation in Kenya: achievements, challenges and lessons ten years later Land Development and Governance Institute (LDGI), Kenya Smallholder settlement schemes in Kenya: A retrospective and prospective analysis of Trans-Nzoia county National Land Commission, Kenya By the communities for the communities: A holistic approach to community-based natural resource governance: UNFAO, Kenya The political economy of Kenya land policy review KENYA LAND ALLIANCE, Kenya |
Date: Wednesday, 27/Mar/2019 | |
8:30am - 10:00am |
05-06: Institutionalizing bottom-up monitoring Location: MC 6-100 Chair: Rueben Lifuka, Transparency International, Germany Prindex: putting global tenure insecurity into perspective with results from 33 country surveys in 2018 1: Global Land Alliance, United States of America; 2: ODI, United Kingdom Perceived tenure insecurity among renters and its implications for ongoing urbanisation 1: Overseas Development Institute, United Kingdom; 2: Global Land Alliance, United States of America Indigenous data sovereignty EWMI-Open Development Initiative, Myanmar National land observatories: a tool for transparency, accountability, and informed decision making over land for all 1: International Land Coalition, Senegal; 2: CIRAD / International Land Coalition, Italy; 3: CIRAD / Observatoire du foncier à Madagascar; 4: CIRAD / ISRA-BAME; 5: Centre for Development and Environment; 6: International Land Coalition, Italy; 7: IPAR, Senegal |
10:30am - 12:00pm |
06-06: National Land Policy Documents: Potential & Challenges Location: MC 6-100 Chair: Estherine Lisinge Fotabong, African Union Development Agency (AUDA-NEPAD), South Africa Zambia’s Land Policy formulation pitfalls-points of divergence Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources, Zambia Demarcation of traditional land management areas in Malawi Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Malawi The Namibian 2nd National Land Conference has passed, how the resolutions taken will influence the politics and reluctance to register tenure rights in the Kavango West and Kavango East regions. Ministry of Land Reform, Namibia Land rights as an imperative for sustainable land and resources management in Kenya. National Land Commission, Kenya |
2:00pm - 3:30pm |
07-06: Challenges of redistributive land reform Location: MC 6-100 Chair: Arno Schaefer, European Commission, Belgium Valuer general of South Africa; rights, responsibilities, and land reform Greenfield Advisors, Inc., United States of America The implications of incomplete restorative justice in South African land restitution: lessons from the Moletele case. University of Pretoria, South Africa Towards addressing the new land reform policy paradigm in South Africa University of Venda, South Africa |
3:45pm - 5:15pm |
08-06: The political economy of land tenure reform Location: MC 6-100 Chair: Caleb Stevens, USAID, United States of America State of land in the Mekong region 1: University of Bern, Lao PDR; 2: Mekong Region Land Governance Project, Lao PDR; 3: McGill University, Canada; 4: Regional Center for Social Science and Sustainable Development, Thailand; 5: Independent; 6: Hanoi University, Vietnam; 7: World Bank, Vietnam; 8: Institute for Policy and Strategy for Agriculture and Rural Development, Vietnam; 9: Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, Lao PDR; 10: Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, Lao PDR; 11: UN Habitat, The Netherlands New innovations-old problems: the case of the flexible land tenure system and communal land registration in Namibia Namibia University of Science and Technology, Namibia "A limited contribution to a complex development problem"? Land titling and land tenure in the Mekong region 1: Forest Trends, United States of America; 2: University of Colorado, United States of America; 3: Australian National University, Australia; 4: Centre for Policy Studies, Cambodia; 5: National University of Laos, Lao PDR; 6: Mekong Regional Land Governance Project, Lao PDR What policy lessons can we learn from stalled land reforms? Insights from Senegal 1: University of Toronto, Canada; 2: Initiative Prospective Agricole et Rurale (IPAR), Senegal |
Date: Thursday, 28/Mar/2019 | |
8:30am - 10:00am |
09-06: Monitoring global commitments on land tenure Location: MC 6-100 Chair: Astrid Jakobs de Padua, World Bank, United States of America The Global Land Rights Index: a new methodology to measure human rights frameworks for land Abt Associates, United States of America Land Governance Indexes: Opportunities to assess progress of adoption of VGGT principles in policy, legal and institutional framework of land governance 1: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Kenya; 2: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome (HQ) Guidelines for effective and impactful SDG reporting of progress on land rights Landesa, United States of America Creating effective data and information tools for monitoring the VGGT 1: Land Portal Foundation, Netherlands; 2: Global Donor Platform for Rural Development, Germany |
10:30am - 12:00pm |
10-06: Data to determine compensation for land acquisition Location: MC 6-100 Chair: James Kavanagh, RICS, United Kingdom Utilizing UAV images for large-scale land development compensation: A case of prevention for compensation speculation in South Korea LX Korea Land and Geospatial Informatix Corp., Korea, Republic of (South Korea) Improve the land acquisition system with a technology based processes approach Transparency International-Secretariat, Germany Analysing governance in the informal land compensation approaches in customary areas of Ghana 1: Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana; 2: University of Development Studies, Tamale, Ghana Valuation and compensation under Zimbabwe post 2000 land reform program Independent Consultant, Zimbabwe |
2:00pm - 3:30pm |
11-06: Improving resilience via better land data Location: MC 6-100 Chair: Luis Triveno, World Bank, United States of America Leveraging national land and geospatial systems for improved disaster resilience 1: The University of Melbourne, Australia; 2: The World Bank, United States of America Integrating land and geospatial systems for disaster resilience – the need for technical and institutional innovation 1: The University of Melbourne, Australia; 2: Land Equity International, Australia; 3: World Bank, United States of America Comprehensive disaster risk management – best practice example of Monastir, Tunisia IABG mbH, Germany The earth observation for sustainable development initiative to support states affected by fragility, conflict and violence 1: SIRS, France; 2: CLS, France; 3: Hatfield Group, Canada; 4: UNITAR, Switzerland |
Date: Friday, 29/Mar/2019 | |
9:00am - 10:30am |
12-03: Scaling up municipal spatial data infrastructure: regulatory innovations and technology solutions Location: MC 6-100 Scaling up municipal spatial data infrastructure: regulatory innovations and technology solutions World Bank, Indonesia |
11:00am - 12:30pm |
13-03: Urban Planning Tools: Suitability and Urban Performance. How spatial data is helping cities in making evidence-driven decisions Location: MC 6-100 Urban Planning Tools: Suitability and Urban Performance. How spatial data is helping cities in making evidence-driven decisions 1: World Bank, Indonesia; 2: CAPSUS, Mexico |
1:30pm - 3:00pm |
14-03: MODELLING intensity of land use for three-dimensional urban activity space Location: MC 6-100 Modelling intensity of land use for three-dimensional urban activity space University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States of America |
Contact and Legal Notice · Contact Address: Conference: 20th Land and Poverty Conference |
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