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 9-100 |
Date: Tuesday, 26/Mar/2019 | |
8:30am - 10:00am | 01-09: Using remote sensing to assess impacts of forest policy Session Chair: Joep Crompvoets, KU Leuven, Belgium |
MC 9-100 | |
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Informality in access to land and deforestation in the legal Amazon: an empirical study of the state of Acre 1Federal University of Acre, Brazil; 2University of Campinas; 3State Secretary for the Environment Last Forests Standing: Deforestation prevention with land-use monitoring and valuation in Côte D’Ivoire Vivid Economics, United Kingdom Land use Management in Nigeria: the role of Remote Sensing 1Covenant University, Ota, Nigeria; 2Lead City University, Ibadan, Nigeria Comparative evaluation of the registered information in the Rural Environmental Registry base under the Federal Cerrado Project 1Brazilian Forest Service, Brazil; 2The World Bank, Brazil; 3Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), Brazil |
10:30am - 12:00pm | 02-09: Using cadastral information to value and govern natural capital Session Chair: Randall Bluffstone, Portland State University, United States of America |
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Valuing Natural Capital RICS, United Kingdom Improving natural resource management for developing nations through the implementation of online mining cadastre solutions Trimble, South Africa Open Interactive Map Platform Infrastructure to support projects on local and regional scale. Brazilian Forest Service, Brazil Restoration Opportunities Atlas of India - building information bridges for people, forests and landscapes World Resources Institute India, India The socio-economic impact of measures to avert or reverse land degradation in agriculture: a systematic review 1PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, Netherlands, The; 2Wageningen University, Netherlands, The; 3IFPRI International Food Policy Research Institute, United States of America |
2:00pm - 3:30pm | 03-09: Linking tenure to planning in forest land Session Chair: Anne Larson, CIFOR, Peru |
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Best-bet options for ensuring tropical forest conservation and livelihoods development: Evidence from the community forest concessions in Petén, Guatemala 1Bioversity International, France; 2World Agroforestry Center (ICRAF), France; 3Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock, Guatemala; 4Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) Forest restoration and afforestation in India 1Rights and Resources Initiative, United States of America; 2University of Toronto, Canada Integrating forest recovery and low-carbon agriculture in priority watersheds of Brazilian savannah: The FIP-Landscape Project 1Brazilian Forest Service (SFB), Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Food Supply (MAPA), Brazil; 2Secretariat for Innovation, Rural Development and Irrigation, Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Food Supply (MAPA), Brazil; 3GIZ, Brazil; 4World Bank, Brazil Tenure security and forest landscape restoration: Results from exploratory research in Boeny, Madagascar 1Center for International Forestry Research, United States of America; 2Ecole Supérieure des Sciences Agronomiques (ESSA); Université d'Antananarivo – Madagascar; 3Independent consultant |
3:45pm - 5:15pm | 04-09: Approaches towards sustainable land use management Session Chair: Kim Thompson, USAID, United States of America |
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Development of an informal land use register for South Africa Data World (Pty) Ltd, South Africa Rural Environmental Registry in the priority municipalities for Cerrado deforestation combating, in Brazil 1The World Bank, Brazil; 2Brazilian Forest Service / Ministry of the Environment, Brazil; 3German Agency for International Cooperation - GIZ Environment and land use trends in the Ethiopian lowlands The World Bank, United States of America |
Date: Wednesday, 27/Mar/2019 | |
8:30am - 10:00am | 05-09: Implementing REDD in practice Session Chair: Peter Veit, World Resources Institute, United States of America |
MC 9-100 | |
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Practical guide for the creation and management of conservation space 1National Cooperative Business Association CLUSA International, United States of America; 2Independent Consultant, Burkina Faso; 3World Bank, United States of America Development of a practical guide to support local actors in the development and management of conservation areas in the context of REDD+ NCBA CLUSA International, United States of America Rethinking land development and offset mechanisms in cambodia Heinrich Boell Foundation, Cambodia Environmental justice in the REDD+ frontier: indigenous experiences from the scholarly literature and proposals for a way forward Center for International Forestry Research, Peru How the climate protection strengthens the indigenous territories in the Amazon: The REDD Early Movers Program (REM) in Mato Grosso - Brazil 1GIZ, Brazil; 2FEPOIMT, Brazil; 3ICV, Brazil |
10:30am - 12:00pm | 06-09: Enhancing tenure security for forest land Session Chair: Jintao Xu, Peking University, China, People's Republic of |
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Multi-stakeholder forums as innovation for natural resource management? Results from a Realist Synthesis Review of the scholarly literature 1CIFOR, Peru; 2University of Maryland, College Park, United States of America; 3PUCP, Peru Examining relationships in forest governance quality: Insights from forest frontier communities in Zambia´s Miombo ecoregion 1Thünen Institute of International Forestry and Forest Economics, Hamburg, Germany; 2Copperbelt University, Kitwe, Zambia Land Tenure Regularization in the Brazilian Amazon: perspectives on identifying social, economic and environmental variables for assessing its impacts 1Amazon Environmental Research Institute (IPAM); 2Consulting for Sustainable Development GITEC-IGIP GmbH; 3Ph.D. Candidate at the University of Amsterdam; 4Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH; 5National Colonization and Agrarian Reform Institute (INCRA); 6Universidade de Campinas (Unicamp) Local perception of indigenous titling programs in the Peruvian Amazon Center for International Forestry Research, Peru Governance structures of native forests' management policy in North Argentina: the role of policy forums in mediating between conservation and production 1University of Bern, Switzerland; 2Modul University, Austria; 3Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh |
2:00pm - 3:30pm | 07-09: Enhancing tenure security for forest land Session Chair: Dietmar Stoian, ICRAF, France |
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Gender gaps and actions being taken to address them in forest landscapes World Bank, United States of America Closing the gender gap in natural resource management programs in Mexico 1World Bank; 2CIDE; 3Cornell University Innovation of locally-led adaptive programming in Natural Resource Governance Change in Myanmar Pyoe Pin Institute, Myanmar |
3:45pm - 5:15pm | 08-09: Expanding land markets and investments Session Chair: Cornelis de Zeeuw, Kadaster, Netherlands, The |
MC 9-100 | |
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“A Land Market is the strategy for access to land for development”. Which land market? For whose benefit? An analysis of the Ugandan case Land and Equity Movement in Uganda - LEMU, Uganda Land governance and urban development find a challenges in the perspective of social safeguards Asian Development Bank (ADB), Bangladesh, People's Republic of Ghana: Collateralizing land use rights on customary land. Lessons and challenges for growing the mortgage market 1DAI, United States of America; 2BenBen, Ghana |
Date: Thursday, 28/Mar/2019 | |
8:30am - 10:00am | 09-09: Bottom-up approaches: A key to land use planning Session Chair: Klaus Ackermann, Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, Germany |
MC 9-100 | |
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Increasing access to land for housing for Irula tribal families: Lessons from implementing the Solid Ground Campaign in India 1Habitat for Humanity International, Philippines; 2Habitat for Humanity, India Giving the land back to people : solving colonial cases of land-grabbing in Madagascar Transparency International - Initiative Madagascar, Madagascar Examining how land laws have implemented GLTN tools UN Habitat, The Netherlands Sustaining sustainable development: Leveraging human rights structures to implement land-related SDGs Landesa, United States of America |
10:30am - 12:00pm | 10-09: Capacity building: Lessons from experience Session Chair: Charl-Thom Hilgardt Bayer, Namibia University of Science and Technology, Namibia |
MC 9-100 | |
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Equal partnership in the capacity building project Eduland2: conceptual design, implementation, successes, challenges & lessons learnt 1University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria; 2Debre Markos University, Ethiopia; 3Technische Universitaet Wien, Austria; 4Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia Encouraging women’s land rights and promoting female land professionals: A twin track approach to enhancing land governance NIRAS/Ethiopia, Ethiopia The land research capacity of Africa: new research centre concept for catalysing improved land governance 1Technical University of Munich, Germany; 2Independent Consultant, South Africa; 3UN-Habitat / GLTN, Uganda The ADLAND model: Transformative experiences and lessons in human capital development in land governance in Africa Technische Universitaet Muenchen, Germany Scaling emerging geospatial technologies for land administration: understanding institutional innovation dynamics through a Technological Innovation System perspective 1KU Leuven, Belgium; 2RMIT University, Australia; 3Hansa Luftbild AG, Germany; 4INES Ruhengeri, Rwanda; 5Leiden University, The Netherlands |
2:00pm - 3:30pm | 11-09: Promising initiatives to build capacity Session Chair: Diane Dumashie, International Federation of Surveyors - FIG, United Kingdom |
MC 9-100 | |
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Using a multi-lateral organisation to catalyse institutional innovation at global scale: Evidence from the work of the Global Land Tool Network partners Independent consultant, Ireland An innovative experience of capacity building for land in Central Africa University of Yaoundé 1, Cameroon Importance of capacity building and training in the World Bank assisted projects - Case study of Serbia Republic Geodetic Authority, Serbia |
Date: Friday, 29/Mar/2019 | |
9:00am - 10:30am | 12-05: Innovative grassroots women led tools for gender responsive land governance |
MC 9-100 | |
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Innovative grassroots women led tools for gender responsive land governance 1HUAIROU COMMISSION, United States of America; 2UCOBAC, Uganda |
11:00am - 12:30pm | 13-05: Starting with women: tools for empowerment |
MC 9-100 | |
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Starting with women: tools for empowerment 1Resource Equity, United States of America; 2Cadasta, United States of America; 3Cadasta, France |
1:30pm - 3:00pm | 14-05: A Women Land Rights scorecard, tool for monitoring implementation of African Union Instruments at country level, A case of eight countries |
MC 9-100 |
Contact and Legal Notice · Contact Address: Conference: 20th Land and Poverty Conference |
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