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.
|
Session Overview |
Date: Monday, 25/Mar/2019 | ||||||||
Posters on display all day; Presenters available 12-2 PM and 5.30-6 PM or contact by email Location: MC Atrium |
||||||||
9:30am - 10:30am |
00-01: Innovative approaches to land data generation Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Klaus Deininger, World Bank, United States of America Survey Solutions: An open source software to collect socio-economic and spatial data World Bank, United States of America Practical experience with mapping informal farms and houses in Zambia 1: World Bank, Zambia; 2: Central Statistics Office, Zambia; 3: MLNR, Zambia Combining drone imagery, street view, cadastral data and machine learning for urban development World Bank, United States of America Data collaboratives: How data sharing can yield better insights World Bank, United States of America Building capacity to use drone imagery for land administration and management: Opportunities and challenges World Bank group, Tanzania |
|||||||
11:00am - 12:30pm |
00-02: Using land data in innovative ways for policy and interventions Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Klaus Deininger, World Bank, United States of America Linking cadastral data & imagery to assess cultivation status of large land acquisitions: Examples from Ethiopia and Malawi New Light Technologies, United States of America Identifying changes in housing investments using satellite imagery World Bank, United States of America Using census maps to put chiefs' areas on the map: Evidence from Malawi 1: Ministry of Lands Housing and Urban Development, Malawi; 2: RCMRD, Kenya Using the SDG module to assess to documents, tenure insecurity, and demand for title 1: World Bank, United States of America; 2: MLNR, ZambiaCSO, Zambia; 3: CSO, zambia |
|||||||
1:30pm - 2:30pm |
00-03: Land ownership and development: Potential lessons for Africa from East Asia’s experience Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Joao Pedro Azevedo, The World Bank, United States of America Land inequality and development: Potential lessons for Africa from East Asia’s experience Overseas Development Institute, United Kingdom |
|||||||
2:00pm - 4:00pm |
00-04: Land in the World Bank's new Environmental and Social Framework Location: MC 2-800 Chair: Mary Lisbeth Gonzalez, World Bank, United States of America History of ESF consultation and what was agreed and why World Bank, United States of America The importance and implication of the ESF to provide support and supervise projects World Bank, United States of America The importance and implications of the new ESF for land projects and for projects with land components / issues World Bank, United States of America ESF and land issues in Africa World Bank, United States of America |
|||||||
2:45pm - 4:00pm |
00-05: Using big data to advance land governance Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Trevor Monroe, The World Bank, United States of America What Governments can do to harness the potential of big data NYU, United States of America Benefits from open access to cadastral data: Lessons from Uruguay DNC, Uruguay Technology for Simplification and Modernisation of the Common agricultural Policy Joint Research Centre of the European Commission, Italy |
|||||||
3:00pm - 4:00pm |
00-16: Stand for her land Location: MC 4-800 Chair: Victoria Stanley, World Bank, United States of America |
|||||||
3:30pm - 4:15pm |
Coffee Break Location: Front Lobby and Preston Lounge |
|||||||
4:30pm - 5:00pm |
00-10: Conference opening Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Simeon Djankov, World Bank, United States of America Opening remarks World Bank, United States of America Digital technologies and land governance in Africa AUDA-NEPAD, South Africa Land policies to allow effective urban service delivery and expansion: Ethiopia’s experience Ministry of Urban Development and Construction, Ethiopia Why regularizing informal properties in Chile is a priority Ministry of National Assets, Chile |
|||||||
5:00pm - 6:00pm |
00-11: Opening keynote Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Simeon Djankov, World Bank, United States of America Keynote: Linking satellite and administrative data for land economics research and practice Tufts University, United States of America Building on new data for evidence-based land policy in Africa African Economic Research Consortium (AERC), Kenya |
|||||||
6:05pm - 6:10pm |
Overflow Room Conference Opening and Keynote Location: Overflow rooms: Preston Lounge; MC 4-800 |
|||||||
7:00pm | Poster Board 01-01 Location: MC Atrium Anthropic activities and sustainability of the natural resources of the Lomako-Yokokala Fauna Reserve (RFLY) in DR Congo. Higher Institute of Agronomic Studies of Mvuazi, Democratic Republic of the Congo Implementing approach for responsibility management of pasture use in Mongolian University of Life Sciences, Mongolia Kyrgyz pastures - nomad heritage (traditional approaches in pasture degradation struggle) KYRGYZ JAYITY National pasture users' association, Kyrgyzstan Farm’s natural resources management strategy Mercy Corps, Democratic Republic of the Congo "Developing community-based land use planning system using the community resource management area (CREMA) model in Ghana 1: Kukje Theological University, Republic of Korea (South Korea); 2: Pals of the Earth-Ghana; 3: Take Care Africa Foundation-Ghana |
Poster Board 01-02 Location: MC Atrium Documenting communal land rights: understanding the use and management of communal land in the highland regions of Ethiopia DAI, United Kingdom Land tenancy, contract term and land conservation-theoretical and empirical analyses on apple growers Northwest A&F University, People's Republic of China Sustainable practices diffusion in socio-ecological systems: the Gorutuba Irrigation Perimeter (Brazil) analysis 1: Regional Economics Applications Laboratory / The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; 2: Centro de Desenvolvimento e Planejamento Regional / Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais; 3: Universidade Federal de Viçosa; 4: FUCAPE Business School Building on local pastoralists’ knowledge for effective management of the arid and semi arid areas 1: University of Nairobi, Kenya, Kenya; 2: Lund University, Sweden Forest planning decision model to restore forest denudation of N. Korea LX Korea Land and Geospatial Informatix Corp., Republic of Korea (South Korea) |
Poster Board 01-03 Location: MC Atrium ILMS - global land transfer standard 1: RICS, United Kingdom; 2: Ordnance Survey, United Kingdom Measuring multi-dimensional poverty analysis in Nepal: a study of poverty alleviation fund intervention programme districts Poverty Alleviation Fund Nepal, Nepal Monitoring progress towards the 2030 sustainability goals: "Trends.Earth" as a support tool for achieving land degradation neutrality Conservation International, United States of America Weak signals for future cadastral systems 1: Aalto University, Finland; 2: National Land Survey of Finland |
Poster Board 01-04 Location: MC Atrium A practical method for evaluating institutional arrangements and policy indicators of land administration system Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Malaysia Evolution régimes foncier en Guinée-Conakry Cabinet CAGEOFI - OGEG, Guinea Spatial flood damage assessment mapping in Abeokuta Pointmile Geotech, Nigeria Achieving SDGs through land consolidation in rural regions of Uttar Pradesh state in India Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, India International Standards – key to unlocking the value of green buildings? RICS, United Kingdom |
Poster Board 01-05 Location: MC Atrium Transforming social norms about women’s land and property rights Wellspring Philanthropic Fund, United States of America Opportunities for innovation: lessons from land rights work in the African Great Lakes Region. ZOA, The Netherlands Protecting Ugandan customary land tenure through documentation of Principles, Practices, Rights and Responsibilities (PPRR) LEMU: Land and Equity Movement in Uganda, Uganda Of the substantive law in the common law: where is the blocking limiting the access to the landed property of the women in Côte d'Ivoire UNIVERSITE FELIX HOUPHOUET BOIGNY, Côte d'Ivoire Leveraging the Sustainable Development Goals to strengthen women’s land rights: takeaways from the espaco feminista model in Brazil 1: Landesa, United States of America; 2: Espaço Feminista, Brazil Financial inclusion through increasing land access rights and improving security of tenure a major pillar to reduce inequality and poverty in Uganda Buganda Land Board, Uganda |
Poster Board 01-06 Location: MC Atrium Delving into the relationship between land tenure and food security using the case of Ayeyarwaddy, Myanmar Landesa, United States of America The impact of land rights regularization on the cassava technology adoption among smallholder farmers in Mozambique: the case of pro-poor value chain development project in the Maputo and Limpopo corridors (PROSUL) Agricultural Development Fund (FDA)/ Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security (MASA), Mozambique Gender and land acquisition: implications for agricultural development in Nigeria. Babcock University, Nigeria; Babcock University, Nigeria; Kwara State University, Nigeria Integrating strategic peacebuilding approach into land and environmental conflict resolution for better Indonesia peace infrastructure University of Notre Dame, United States of America From commitment to practice: lessons from efforts to implement corporate policies to respect land rights Landesa Strengthening farmers’ land rights in Malawi 1: Ministry of Lands, Housing & Urban Development, Malawi; 2: DAI Europe |
Poster Board 01-07 Location: MC Atrium Refugees influx, land access and second generation health outcomes in host communities: evidence from Tanzania The World Bank Group The conceptual framework on women’s land tenure security: an action tool Resource Equity Linking land tenure and use, catalyzing land use innovation for grassroots women Action for Women and Awakening in Rural Environment Uganda, Uganda From culture to human rights; unmasking the gendered perspectives in the application of law and existing culture in protecting vulnerable widow’s land rights. KELIN Kenya, Kenya Housing provision and land rights in the quilombola community Ribeirão da Mutuca (Brazil). Faculdade de Arquitetura e Urbanismo da Universidade de São Paulo - FAUUSP, Brazil |
Poster Board 01-08 Location: MC Atrium Grassroots women’s land rights for development Action for Women and Awakening in Rural Environment Uganda, Uganda Norms formation: California gold rush and women's roles 1: Columbia University, United States of America; 2: Barnard College, United States of America Innovative approaches in transforming social norms for strengthened women's land rights and security of tenure Uganda Community Based Association for Women and Children's welfare ( UCOBAC), Uganda Land grabbing and the land justice movement in Taiwan 1: China University of Technology, Taiwan; 2: National Chengchi University, Taiwan Peaceful land for future citizen Ministry of Agriculture, Ethiopia |
Poster Board 01-09 Location: MC Atrium Tenure responsive land governance: the case of government-community partnership towards improving livelihoods in Kenya and Uganda 1: UN-Habitat, Kenya; 2: IFAD Land tenure in Sub-Saharan Africa and its implications for access and benefit-sharing to bio-diversity University of Jos, Nigeria Legal establishments and gendered access to land in patriarchal societies of North-Western Ghana Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana Women’s life cycle as a pathway to land rights on customary tenure in west Nile region of Uganda: lessons for certification and titling. 1: Associates Research Uganda; 2: Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development; 3: Consultant Surveyors and Planners; 4: Global Expert - Land and Natural Resources Practical approaches to implementing and monitoring free, prior and informed consent processes Equitable Origin, United States of America |
Poster Board 01-10 Location: MC Atrium The impact of land rights regularization on the cassava technology adoption among smallholder farmers in Mozambique: the case of pro-poor value chain development project in the Maputo and Limpopo corridors (PROSUL) Agricultural Development Fund (FDA)/ Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security (MASA), Mozambique Innovative approaches for promoting gender responsive land governance processes for strengthened women’s land rights and equitable land rights: application of the Gender Evaluation Criteria on land rights registration processes on customary land 1: Uganda Community Based Association for Women and Children's Welfare (UCOBAC), Uganda; 2: UN Habitat/ Global Land Tools Network Linking land tenure and use, catalyzing land use innovation for grassroots women Action for Women and Awakening in Rural Environment Uganda, Uganda The land tenure system in Bangladesh: trends, challenges and options for reforms Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Bangladesh Discourse on Customary Land Act 2016: evolution of land rights or devolution of powers University of Malawi Polytechnic, Malawi |
Poster Board 01-11 Location: MC Atrium Today's urban families are rapidly losing their connections and kinship ties with rural families, making the new generations ignorant about the ways of life, production processes, and food origins that are served at the table 1: Secretary of the Association of Notaries and Registrars of the State of Mato Grosso- Brazil; 2: Lowyer, Brazil; 3: Notary, Brazil Land-based livelihoods and gender vulnerability: a study of cultural inheritance practices in select African states Translantic Development Limited, United Kingdom Land regularization of quilombola community in Brazil 1: Campinas City Hall, Brazil; 2: University of Campinas; 3: University of Campinas; 4: Instituto Nacional de Colonização e Reforma Agrária; 5: University of Campinas Human rights and land policy in quilombola lands: a decade of construction (2008-2018) 1: UNICAMP, Brazil; 2: FAO, Brazil Towards a responsive customary land rights security in rural Ghana: adopting a rural titling approach Lands Commission, Ghana State land inventories using the voluntary guidelines on the responsible governance of tenure (VGGT) - case of Madagascar 1: Consultant; 2: Land Reform Coordination Unit; 3: Cercom; 4: Essa |
Poster Board 01-12 Location: MC Atrium Role of income distribution and consumption expenditure on agriculture output: case of Nigeria 1: Jazan University, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,; 2: University of Macerata, Italy Government intervention for superior land acquisition outcomes 1: Kent State University - Tuscarawas, United States of America; 2: NITI Aayog, India; 3: University of Central Missouri, United States of America Local infrastructure effects: large-scale land acquisition. Ministry of Lands & Parliamentary Reforms, Sri Lanka The dichotomy of tenure arrangements and its effects on land acquisition and compensation: evidence from Zambia 1: University of Lusaka, Zambia; 2: Copperbelt University, Zambia; 3: Namibia University of Science and Technology, Namibia |
Poster Board 01-13 Location: MC Atrium Identifying yield gap and potential crop production in Ethiopia, Gambella Region Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Germany Monitoring large-scale land acquisitions using open data platforms for improved decision making Land Matrix Initiative, South Africa Implementation of infrastructure expansion projects in Tanzania: -the property rights quagmire 1: Majengo Estates Dev, Tanzania; 2: Land Administration Unit, Ardhi University, Tanzania Le soutien des communautés locales à la maîtrise de la gestion foncière : un bon prétexte de déploiement de nouveaux outils de sécurisation du foncier et d’acquisition des terres 1: PDIDAS, Senegal; 2: Banque Mondiale Displacement in the name of development: insights from Zimbabwe China Agricultural University, People's Republic of China |
Poster Board 01-14 Location: MC Atrium Gold mining in Eastern Cameroon: The rights of artisanal miners in the face of semi-mechanized mining 1: Centre pour l'Environnement et le Développement, Cameroon; 2: International Institute for Environment and Development; 3: Network for The Fight Against Hunger The bottlenecks in large scale land acquisition for agriculture: a case study of Azama, Inikorogha and Opuede communities in Gbaramatu Kingdom. 1: Angene Surveys & Consultants, Nigeria; 2: Gbaramatu Kingdom; 3: GFSH Consult Ltd, Nigeria Lessons from the promised land: a case study of ‘land for land’ compensation for the Buseruka Oil Refinery, Uganda LEMU: Land and Equity Movement in Uganda, Uganda Impact of land fragmentation on productivity and profitability of crops in Pakistan 1: University of Agriculture Faisalabad, Pakistan; 2: Government College University Faisalabad, Pakistan |
Poster Board 01-15 Location: MC Atrium Land Huazhong University of Science and Technology, People's Republic of China Land readjustment: the missing link in progressive urban land management in Zimbabwe University of Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe Polycentricity; a panacea for managing urban expansion in secondary towns? A planning scenario study of Mumias Town, Western Kenya National Land Commission, Kenya Design and implement of discount-oriented businesses based on the sale of targeted partnership shares and improved Government’s rules and regulations Islamic Republic of Iran |
Poster Board 01-16 Location: MC Atrium An analysis of the effects of urban expansion and housing problems on resident’s quality of life in the outskirts of Lagos, Nigeria Yaba College of Technology, Yaba- Lagos, Nigeria Research on the moderate-scale of apple farmers in different targets Northwest A&F University, People's Republic of China Urban population modeling: towards a better planning CAPSUS, Mexico Land use change detection and prediction using GIS and Remote Sensing, case study of Nsukka Urban, Enugu, Nigeria 1: Surveyors Council of Nigeria (SURCON), Nigeria; 2: Department of Surveying and Geoinformatics, Enugu State University of Science and Technology, Nigeria |
Date: Tuesday, 26/Mar/2019 | ||||||||
8:00am - 6:00pm |
Posters on display all day; Presenters available 12-2 PM and 5.30-6 PM or contact by email Location: MC Atrium |
|||||||
8:30am - 10:00am |
01-01: Land for African development: towards stakeholder synergies Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Estherine Lisinge Fotabong, African Union Development Agency (AUDA-NEPAD), South Africa Translation English - French Opening remarks African Union Commission, Ethiopia The role of land governance in achieving Agenda 2063 and SDGs AUDA-NEPAD, South Africa Consolidating transparent land administration and land revenue generation in Uganda Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Uganda The way forward on land reform in Namibia: lessons from the 2nd National Land Conference Ministry of Land Reform, Namibia Strengthening land governance in Mali Ministry of Housing and Urban Planning, Mali |
01-02: Strengthening land governance for sustainable growth in Ukraine Location: MC 13-121 Chair: Anthony A. Gaeta, The World Bank, United States of America VC Increasing the transparency and decentralization in Ukrainian land relations State Service of Ukraine for Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre, Ukraine Roll-out of e-services and e-auctions - progress and challenges ahead State Service of Ukraine for Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre, Ukraine Towards a methodology for automatic cadastral error identification World Bank, Ukraine World Bank support to help improve land governance in Ukraine World Bank, Ukraine |
01-03: Ways to establish cadastral systems at scale Location: MC 2-800 Chair: Claire Galpin, World Bank, United States of America Increasing cadastral survey productivity to tackle undocumented land rights worldwide: A case study Trimble Inc, United States of America Large-scale Mapping Leica Geosystem, Denmark An innovative affordable and decentralized model for land registration and administration at a national scale in Tanzania DAI Global LLC, Tanzania Leveraging location-enabled street photos and machine learning to automate large-scale data collection in support of property valuation ESRI, United States of America |
01-04: Land administration and changing gender norms Location: MC 4-100 Chair: Oumar Sylla, UN-Habitat, Kenya A tripartite normative interaction in land registration: inheritance and land information updating University of Twente, Netherlands Women and customary land tenure: emerging developments and ways forward in Savelugu, Ghana 1: Techninical University of Munich, Germany; 2: UN-Habitat / Global Land Tool Network, Uganda; 3: Kwame Nkrumah Univerisy of Science and Technonology, Ghana Securing property rights for Women and children through Distributed Ledger Technology in Judiciary Absolutum Consultancy Private Limited, India Women and land: A conflict of culture and law Federation of Women Layers, Kenya |
01-05: Evaluating impacts of land tenure interventions Location: MC 5-100 Chair: Hosaena Ghebru, International Food Policy Research Institute, United States of America Land and human rights, gender and indigenous people of Kaduna state, Nigeria Kaduna Geographic Information Service, Nigeria World Bank-funded land titling in Piauí, Brazil: a pillar of growth or a regularization of land grabs? 1: ActionAid USA, United States of America; 2: Rede Social de Justiça e Direitos Humanos, Brasil; 3: ActionAid Brasil, Brasil; 4: Comissão Pastoral da Terra, Brasil Land tenure, gender, and productivity in Ethiopia and Tanzania The World Bank (USA), UNU-MERIT (The Netherlands) and Jimma University (Ethiopia) The Impacts of land tenure regularisation programme in Rwanda 1: UK Department for International Development, Rwanda; 2: Mokoro ltd |
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 |
01-07: Managing public land for the common good Location: MC 7-100 Chair: Lorenzo Cotula, IIED, United Kingdom Common pool resource access rights and wrongs: Insights from Ghana Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit GmbH, Ghana Spatial planning for land use and protection as an anti-poverty tool in rural areas: case study of innovative approaches on the USAID-funded agriculture and rural development support project Chemonics International Inc. The official biological killing of productive land under the silence of a class of citizens and applause of others: when all contribute in destroying living land!!! 1: Ibn Khaldoun University of Tiaret (Algeria); 2: Abou-Bekr Blekaid University of Tlemcen (Algeria) Improving governance of tenure: Technology as the enabler 1: FAO, Ethiopia; 2: FAO, HQ, Italy |
01-08: Methodological approaches to urban property valuation Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Ruud Kathmann, Netherlands Council for Real Estate Assessment, Netherlands, Netherlands, The Self-declaration of value: an option for the urban property tax 1: African Tax Institute, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa; 2: School of the Built Environment, University of Ulster, N. Ireland, UK Valuing property with bad data: utilizing GIS and spatial modeling to achieve equitable property tax valuations in the face of incomplete data 1: IAAO; 2: Esri Response surface analysis (RSA): modeling values in geographically sparse markets 1: African Tax Institute, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa; 2: International Association of Assessing Officers, Kansas, United States; 3: School of the Built Environment, University of Ulster, N. Ireland, UK Standard price points in spatial interpolation. A case study National Land Survey, Finland Using remote sensing data and machine learning to value property in Kigali, Rwanda 1: German Aerospace Center; 2: International Growth Centre, Rwanda; 3: University of Tübingen; 4: Ministry of Economic and Financial Planning, Rwanda; 5: Carnegie Mellon University |
01-09: Using remote sensing to assess impacts of forest policy Location: MC 9-100 Chair: Joep Crompvoets, KU Leuven, Belgium Informality in access to land and deforestation in the legal Amazon: an empirical study of the state of Acre 1: Federal University of Acre, Brazil; 2: University of Campinas; 3: State 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 1: Covenant University, Ota, Nigeria; 2: Lead City University, Ibadan, Nigeria Comparative evaluation of the registered information in the Rural Environmental Registry base under the Federal Cerrado Project 1: Brazilian Forest Service, Brazil; 2: The World Bank, Brazil; 3: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), Brazil |
01-10: Land consolidation: A tool to improve land use Location: MC 10-100 Chair: Morten Hartvigsen, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), Hungary New trends in development of agricultural land consolidation in Russia State University of Land Use Planning, Russian Federation An analysis of long-term experiences with land consolidation projects 1: Dutch Cadastre, Land Registry and Mapping Agency (Kadaster), Netherlands, The; 2: University of Munich Germany; 3: National Land Survey Finland; 4: Aalto University Finland/National Land Survey of Finland Land Consolidation as a multi-purpose Instrument - exploring Opportunities and addressing Challenges in Kosovo 1: GIZ - Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Internationale Zusammenarbeit, Kosovo; 2: MAFRD - Kosovo Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Rural Development FAO recommendations on land consolidation legislation Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), Hungary |
01-11: Fit for purpose land administration Location: MC C1-100 Chair: Yerach Doytsher, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel Secure Tenure for all starts to emerge: New Experiences of Countries implementing a Fit-For-Purpose Approach to Land Administration 1: Aalborg University, Denmark; 2: KnowEdge, United Kingdom Fit-for-purpose land administration strategy: an innovative approach to implement land policies in Nepal 1: Ministry of Land Management, Cooperatives and Poverty Alleviation, Government of Nepal; 2: Kathmandu University, Nepal; 3: UNHABITAT, Nepal; 4: Aalborg University, Denmark; 5: Land and GLTN Unit, Land and Governance Branch, UN-Habitat, Kenya; 6: Community Self Reliance Center, Kathmandu Nepal; 7: Land and GLTN Unit, UN-Habitat, Kenya Creating resilience to natural disasters through FFP land administration – an application in Nepal 1: Kadaster, Netherlands, The; 2: UN-Habitat Nepal; 3: UN-Habitat Global Land Tool Network; 4: University Twente, ITC Faculty of Geo-information Science and Earth Observation; 5: Swinburne University of Technology Fit for Purpose Land Administration: Innovations as a result of country implementations 1: Kadaster, Netherlands, The; 2: Twente University - ITC |
01-12: Planning land use to attract investment Location: MC C1-200 Chair: Kaitlin Cordes, Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment, United States of America Challenges of making land available for large-scale investment in commercial agriculture in Tanzania: the case of Missenyi district Ardhi university, Tanzania Insights from participatory land use planning in Liberia: the dos and don’ts of bottom-up land use planning as part of tenure reform 1: Liberia Land Authority; 2: IDH, The Sustainable Trade Initiative Building harmonized private and state land data and information systems in Ethiopia 1: Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, Ethiopia; 2: NIRAS Making Myanmar's National Land Use Policy and Legal Framework work: opportunities and challenges for harnessing technology, innovation and investment in people for Myanmar's inclusive development 1: The PLAN: Public Legal Aid Network, Myanmar; 2: Emerald Sea Group; 3: River Mekong Group |
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 |
||||
10:00am - 10:30am |
Coffee Break Location: Front Lobby |
|||||||
10:30am - 12:00pm |
02-01: Harnessing the IT & data revolution for African land policy Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Clement Adjorlolo, New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD), South Africa Using building footprint data to inform planning & monitor compliance with land use regulations: The case of Kigali & Musanze Independent consultant, Rwanda Establishing an interoperable land information system in Bamako for urban development secretariat permanent de la reforme domaniale et fonciere au Mali, Mali Strategies to ensure sustainability of Rwanda’s registry: Paperless registration of marriage/death, fee reductions, and regulatory change Rwanda Natural Resources Authority, Rwanda Tenure insecurity and demand for land documents in Zambia: Evidence from a nation-wide household survey 1: Central Statisticsl Office, Zambia; 2: World Bank, United States of America |
02-02: Spatial transformation to achieve green urban growth Location: MC 13-121 Chair: Ede Jorge Ijjasz-Vasquez, The World Bank, United States of America Opening World Bank, United States of America Keynote: Urbanism and climate change – A holistic approach to climate change Calthorpe Associates, United States of America Report Launch World Bank, United States of America Panelist Centre for Livable Cities of the Ministry of National Development, Singapore Panelist University of Minnesota, United States of America Panelist Development Research Center of the State Council, China, People's Republic of Panelist World Bank, United States of America |
02-03: Innovative technology in the land sector Location: MC 2-800 Chair: Steven Nystrom, FIG Commission 9, United States of America Innovation through artificial intelligence Emirates Real Estate Solutions, United Arab Emirates Beyond blockchain: technology in the land agenda World Bank, United States of America Evaluating the hype: the current potential of blockchain for land Future of Property Rights Program at New America Digital identity, housing data, and disaster resilience in Puerto Rico New America, United States of America |
02-04: Can land administration foster gender equality? Location: MC 4-100 Chair: Rumyana Tonchovska, UNFAO, Italy Improving gender equality in land tenure in the Republic Geodetic Authority of Serbia 1: Republic Geodetic Authority, Serbia; 2: UN Food and Agriculture Organization From laws to action: Achieving SDG indicator 5.a.2 in the Western Balkans 1: FAO, Italy; 2: GIZ, Germany; 3: UINL, Italy Using open data to analyze participation in the labor market and property registration of women in Kosovo Marin Sh.P.K., Kosovo Women, Financial Inclusion and the Law: Why Property Rights matter for Women's access to and use of financial services World Bank Group, United States of America |
02-05: Evaluating impacts of land tenure interventions Location: MC 5-100 Chair: Malcolm Childress, Global Land Alliance, United States of America Land conservation for open space: spatial spillovers and the impact of neighbors University of Maryland at College Park, United States of America Smallholder crop market participation in Tanzania: The influence of transaction cost, asset endowment and producer cooperatives Chr.Michelsen Institute, Norway Land access and household implementation of agroecosystems in rural Guatemala Iowa State University, United States of America Land markets and transaction costs following institutional strengthening: A pre-post evaluation in Mongolia The Cloudburst Group, United States of America |
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 |
02-07: Supporting land management by customary authorities Location: MC 7-100 Chair: Stephen Brooks, US Agency for International Development, United States of America Customary land secretariats in Ghana as change agents in land dispute management Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources, Ghana Innovative customary land governance in Zambia: experiences, lessons learned and emerging impacts 1: People's Process on Housing & Poverty in Zambia, Zambia; 2: Chamuka Royal Establishment; 3: UN-Habitat/GLTN Improving customary land administration in Ghana- CLSs shows the way Office of the Administrator of Stool Lands, Ghana Making Customary Land Secretariats financially and operationally sustainable from the ground up in Ghana 1: Meridia, Netherlands; 2: Innola, United States of America |
02-08: Remote sensing and automation for property tax assessment Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Amy Rasmussen, International Association of Assessing Officers, United States of America Supporting local government administrations through public private partnerships (PPP). 1: Cotecna Inspection SA, United Arab Emirates; 2: Cotecna Inspection SA, Geneva Land characteristics survey in Korea, utilizing spatial information Korea Appraisal Board, Korea, Republic of (South Korea) Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of a satellite–based approach to maintaining a property database Airbus Defence and Space, United Kingdom The points-based method: simplification of valuation processes for property tax purposes International Centre for Tax and Development (ICTD), Cameroon |
02-09: Using cadastral information to value and govern natural capital Location: MC 9-100 Chair: Randall Bluffstone, Portland State University, United States of America 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 1: PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, Netherlands, The; 2: Wageningen University, Netherlands, The; 3: IFPRI International Food Policy Research Institute, United States of America |
02-10: Balancing rights, development and natural resources protection Location: MC 10-100 Chair: Omoding James Peters Opio, AfDB, Côte d'Ivoire Land and resource tenure tensions driven by extractives on the commons of Karamoja – Uganda: 1: Associates Research Trust Uganda, Uganda; 2: Resource Equity, US; 3: Global Land Expert Emerging issues in convergence of conservation and development within wildlife protected areas in Kenya Kenya Wildlife Service, Kenya The assault on sanctity of village lands in Tanzania by conservation initiatives Lawyers' Environmental Action Team (LEAT), Tanzania Protecting the nexus between communities’ land and water tenure rights: a comparative analysis of national laws recognizing the freshwater rights of indigenous peoples and local communities 1: Rights and Resources Initiative, United States of America; 2: Environmental Law Institute, Malawi |
02-11: Fit for purpose land administration Location: MC C1-100 Chair: Rudolf Staiger, FIG- International Federation of Surveyors, Germany Delivering land administration services at scale Ministry of Water, Land and Natural Resources, Malaysia Using participatory approaches and innovative technology to empower communities in securing their land US Agency for International Development, United States of America Low-cost cadastre and valuation with lightweight technology Esri, United States of America Digitization of the Land Registry within a Plural Legislative Framework: A case study of land registry innovations in Trinidad and Tobago 1: Land Administration Consultant, Bolivia, Plurinational State of; 2: Ministry of the Attorney General and Legal Affairs, Trinidad & Tobago Taking matters into their own hands: why innovation in community land data collection matters Cadasta Foundation, United States of America |
02-12: Can large investment catalyze agricultural transformation? Location: MC C1-200 Chair: Thomas Jayne, Michigan State University, United States of America The Resource Impact Dashboard (RID) An innovative global framework to measure the local impact of landed resources exploitation by industries 1: Institute for Social Research in Africa, Burkina Faso; 2: Universidade de Lurio, Mozambique; 3: Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Switzerland Agricultural growth corridors in Sub-Saharan Africa - New hope for territorial rural development or another non-starter? German Development Institute (DIE), Germany A framework for the development of responsible agropoles in Africa International Institute for Sustainable Development, Mali Changing farm structure and rural transformation in Africa Michigan State University, United States of America |
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 |
||||
12:00pm - 2:00pm |
Lunch Location: Front Lobby and Preston Lounge |
Women's caucus Location: MC 4-100 |
||||||
12:30pm - 2:00pm |
00-12: Leveraging geospatial infrastructure to advance tenure security at scale Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Haishan Fu, World Bank, United States of America Leveraging geospatial infrastructure to advance tenure security at scale ESRI, United States of America |
|||||||
2:00pm - 3:30pm |
03-01: Building analytical capacity on land in Africa Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Emmanuel Nkurunziza, Regional Centre for Mapping of Resources for Development (RCMRD), Kenya NEPAD support to policy analysis capacity building in Africa NEPAD, South Africa Policy relevant research: Building on AERC's PhD course to strengthen analytical capacity on land governance in Africa African Economic Research Consortium (AERC), Kenya Harnessing the IT revolution for African land policies World Bank, United States of America Expanding the frontier for research on land in Africa African Economic Research Consortium (AERC), Kenya |
03-02: New ways of measuring urban extent Location: MC 13-121 Chair: Shlomo Angel, New York University, United States of America Definition matters. Metropolitan areas and agglomeration economies in a large developing country 1: World Bank, United States of America; 2: Erasmus University Rotterdam Densification vs. expansion: recent findings for a global sample of cities New York University, United States of America Accurately monitoring urbanization at global scale – the world settlement footprint 1: German Aerospace Center - DLR, Germany; 2: Google Inc., USA Characterizing and managing urban expansion for higher equity, productivity, and environmental quality in the global south 1: World Resources Institute, WRI, United States of America; 2: Yale University, , United States of America |
03-03: Low-cost ways to establish cadastral systems Location: MC 2-800 Chair: Andy Wickless, Trimble, Inc., United States of America Precision geolocation at the service of least developed countries Exagone, France Fit for Purpose, scalable GNSS data collection Leica Geosystems, Germany Customized earth observation based information services 1: GeoCodis Ltd., Slovenia; 2: ZRC SAZU, Slovenia Deploying titling and customary land registration systems with a blockchain element Medici Land Governance, United States of America |
03-04: Recognizing women's rights over common resources Location: MC 4-100 Chair: David Bledsoe, Resource Equity, United States of America Securing women’s property rights in utilization of commons: Lessons from the Kadenge community of Yala Swamp National Legal Aid Service, Kenya Customary land tenure systems and gendered land rights in Ghana’s northern region: Results from phase II gender equity and land tenure focus groups Mississippi State University, United States of America Women’s tenure security on collective lands: Implications for measurement and policy 1: IFPRI, United States of America; 2: Namati; 3: University of Oxford Exploring the role of gender equity in customary land administration to boost production 1: International Institute of Rural Reconstruction, Uganda; 2: UN Habitat/GLTN, Uganda |
03-05: Land price determinants Location: MC 5-100 Chair: Dieter von Fintel, Stellenbosch University, South Africa Does the Real Estate Trading Management System (RTMS) affect housing price and tax base?: Evidence from Korea Korea Development Institute, Korea, Republic of (South Korea) Spatial distributions of job accessibility, housing rents, and poverty in Nairobi, Kenya World Bank, United States of America Monopolist land supply, housing cycle and entrepreneurship in urban China The Economist, China, People's Republic of Growth of cities and urban influence on agricultural land prices in Malawi Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway |
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 |
03-07: Land policies for smart city development Location: MC 7-100 Chair: Rachelle Alterman, Neaman Institue for National Policy Research, Technion, Israel Experiments of urban land supply and development: India RICS School of Built Environment, India Citizen-centric digital land and asset management in the greenfield city development: case study of Amaravati Andhra Pradesh Capital Region Development Authority, India Egovernance initiatives of slum rehabilitation authority, Mumbai Government of Maharashtra, India Imagine and design the legal framework for the cities of the future: the example of Mauritian ‘smart cities’ 1: Ordre des Géomètres-experts, France; 2: Conseil Supérieur du Notariat, France |
03-08: Making property tax systems transparent and equitable Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Ronald Worth, International Association of Assessing Officers, United States of America Open Government - Building trust and strengthening the delivery of valuation services 1: Council for Real Estate Assessment, The Netherlands; 2: Valuation Office, Ireland Customer relations and communication in land administration Institute of Revenues Rating and Valuation, United Kingdom Property Taxation in India: Issues impacting revenue performance and suggestions for reform World Bank, United States of America |
03-09: Linking tenure to planning in forest land Location: MC 9-100 Chair: Anne Larson, CIFOR, Peru Best-bet options for ensuring tropical forest conservation and livelihoods development: Evidence from the community forest concessions in Petén, Guatemala 1: Bioversity International, France; 2: World Agroforestry Center (ICRAF), France; 3: Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock, Guatemala; 4: Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) Forest restoration and afforestation in India 1: Rights and Resources Initiative, United States of America; 2: University of Toronto, Canada Integrating forest recovery and low-carbon agriculture in priority watersheds of Brazilian savannah: The FIP-Landscape Project 1: Brazilian Forest Service (SFB), Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Food Supply (MAPA), Brazil; 2: Secretariat for Innovation, Rural Development and Irrigation, Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Food Supply (MAPA), Brazil; 3: GIZ, Brazil; 4: World Bank, Brazil Tenure security and forest landscape restoration: Results from exploratory research in Boeny, Madagascar 1: Center for International Forestry Research, United States of America; 2: Ecole Supérieure des Sciences Agronomiques (ESSA); Université d'Antananarivo – Madagascar; 3: Independent consultant |
03-10: Can participatory land use planning help secure tenure? Location: MC 10-100 Chair: Christopher Mulenga, University of Lusaka, Zambia Rural land use planning, the integration of shared resources mapping for improved communal tenure security: experiences from Zambia 1: University of Lusaka, Zambia; 2: Chipata District Land Alliance, Zambia Context, power, equity and effectiveness in territorial planning multi-stakeholder commissions: a comparative analysis of two very different Brazilian States 1: University of Florida (UF), United States of America; 2: University of Florida (UF), United States of America; 3: Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), Peru Clarification, recognition and formalization of land rights in a landscape restoration project in Burundi 1: Independant consultant, France; 2: World Bank Participatory Community Land Use Planning (CLUP ) as a means of conflict prevention and poverty alleviation in rural areas through pilot experiments in the east of Democratic Republic of Congo: provinces of North Kivu, South Kivu and Tituri UN-HABITAT, Congo, Republic of the |
03-11: Interoperability of land data: Conceptual issues Location: MC C1-100 Chair: Jacob Vos, Dutch Cadastre, Land Registry and Mapping Agency (Kadaster), Netherlands, The Land administration data integration – modern concept Innola Solutions, Inc., United States of America Land Administration Models - A central register and land information system containing as much information as possible about a property HM Land Registry, United Kingdom An applicative approach for cadastral processes implementation in multi-dimensional land management systems Mapping and Geo-Information Engineering, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel The impact of the agricultural land management information system on the work of local self-government units and directorate for agricultural land GIZ- Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit, United States of America |
03-12: Can large farms attract local growth? Location: MC C1-200 Chair: Derick Bowen, Millennium Challenge Corporation, United States of America How and why large-scale agricultural investments induce diverse trajectories of regional development in Kenya, Madagascar and Mozambique 1: Centre for Development and Environment (CDE), University of Bern, Switzerland; 2: CIRAD / International Land Coalition; 3: University of Pretoria; 4: CIRAD / University of Pretoria; 5: CIRAD / Observatoire du foncier Madagascar; 6: CIRAD, France; 7: CETRAD, Kenya Investing in land versus land use: analyzing investment decisions by transnational forestry and agriculture companies 1: Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium; 2: F.R.S.- FNRS, Brussels, Belgium Large-scale land aggregation for transforming and scaling up African agriculture African Development Bank, Côte d'Ivoire |
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 |
||||
3:30pm - 3:45pm |
Coffee Break Location: Front Lobby |
|||||||
3:45pm - 5:15pm |
04-01: Scaling-up land programs - African experiences and global solutions Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Michael Roth, World Bank, United States of America Translation English - French Introductory remarks African Union Commission, Ethiopia Setting the scene Consultant, United States of America Discussant UNECA, Ethiopia Discussant Agence Foncière Rurale, AFOR, Côte d'Ivoire Discussant Ministry in charge of Land Affairs, Madagascar Discussant Agency for Real Estate Cadastre, Macedonia Discussant Regional Centre for Mapping of Resources for Development (RCMRD), Kenya Closing remarks World Bank, United States of America Closing remarks Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, Germany |
04-02: Registry interoperability and data protection Location: MC 13-121 Chair: Nicolás Nogueroles, IPRA-CINDER (International Property Registries Association), Spain Interoperability model for land registries (IMOLA) project in the European Union Romanian Land Registry Association, Romania The evolution of the Chilean land registry system: from the 19th century to the implementation of new technologies Conservador de Bienes Raíces de Santiago, Chile Registry of True Owners according to the European Directives to fight money laundering IPRA-CINDER, Spain The interconnection and interoperability between Business Registries in Europe Registrars of Portugal, Portugal The interconnection between Land Registries in a Federal State such as Mexico CINDER, Mexico Transformative initiatives concerning the delivery of land title registration services in British Columbia Director of Land Titles, British Columbia, Canada |
04-03: Interoperability of spatial data: Examples and regulatory framework Location: MC 2-800 Chair: Gitanjali Swamy, IoTask, India Policy person’s guide to navigating past the map Hexagon Geosystems, United States of America The future role of official geospatial reference data in a fully digital environment State Agency for Geoinformation and State Survey Lower Saxony (LGLN), Germany Legal and policy frameworks for geospatial information management Centre for Spatial Law and Policy, United States of America Geospatial Data points the way to integrating government for sustainable development Ordnance Survey, United Kingdom |
04-04: Legal and normative aspects of making law gender sensitive Location: MC 4-100 Chair: Jolyne Sanjak, Tetratech, United States of America Land and womanhood- ethnography on propertied women in Bengal Max Weber Centre for Advanced Cultural and Social Studies, Germany "Innovations to protect women’s customary land rights: Practical experiences from Sierra Leone." 1: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Sierra Leone; 2: Lafayette University, USA; 3: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Italy The farmer and her husband: legal innovations for women in contract farming IISD, Switzerland |
04-05: Assessing impact of Infrastructure investments Location: MC 5-100 Chair: Innocent Matshe, African Economic Research Consortium (AERC), Kenya How do mass transit investments affect land values? evidence from MRT-3 Asian Development Bank, Philippines Ecological footprint of transportation infrastructure 1: University of California, San Diego, United States of America; 2: World Bank; 3: Dartmouth College How large are the contributions of cities to the development of rural communities? 1: London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom; 2: Latin American Center for Rural Development (RIMISP); 3: Food and Agricutural Organization of the United Nations (FAO); 4: The National Statistics Institute of Chile (INE) From municipal investments to functional subregions: new territorial planning units in Colombia DNP, Colombia |
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 |
04-07: Managing sprawl: From data to policies Location: MC 7-100 Chair: Neeraj Baruah, Vivid Economics, United Kingdom Anatomy of Density New York University, United States of America Measuring urban economic density The London School of Economics, United Kingdom Master scheme for the simplification and digital transformation of urban land management 1: IGN FI, France; 2: Ministry of Construction, Housing and Urban Planning (MCLAU), Ivory Coast The National Urban Policy as a Framework for managing Urban expansion and land use change in Malawi Mnistry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Malawi |
04-08: Implementing urban land value capture Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Riel Franzsen, University of Pretoria, South Africa The role of transferrable development rights in emerging economies 1: Oxford Brookes University, United Kingdom; 2: World Bank, Washington DC, USA; 3: World Bank, Ankara, Turkey Is there a role of Land Value Capture Instruments for financing infrastructure investments in a messy urban growth scenario? Harvard University and Torcuato Di Tella University, Argentine Republic Unlocking the potential of urban land in Kenya 1: World Bank, Kenya; 2: Walker Kontos Advocates, Kenya Institutional arrangements as a catalyzing instrument for land value capture processes in public transportation projects JFP & Asociados, Colombia The untold story of Taiwan's land-based financing program - land readjustment or land grabbing? 1: National Chengchi University, Taiwan; 2: China University of Technology, Taiwan |
04-09: Approaches towards sustainable land use management Location: MC 9-100 Chair: Kim Thompson, USAID, United States of America 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 1: The World Bank, Brazil; 2: Brazilian Forest Service / Ministry of the Environment, Brazil; 3: German Agency for International Cooperation - GIZ Environment and land use trends in the Ethiopian lowlands The World Bank, United States of America |
04-10: Addressing the challenges of pastoral tenure Location: MC 10-100 Chair: Stephanie Burgos, Oxfam America, United States of America Innovative electronic pasture committee software KYRGYZ JAYITY National pasture users' association, Kyrgyzstan Pastoral rights to mobility in Senegal: unpacking paradoxes and reimagining sustainable management University of Wisconsin-Madison, Unites States of America Some issues of reducing pasture degradation in Mongolia Mongolian University of Life Sciences, Mongolia |
04-11: Are PPPs the future of land administration? Location: MC C1-100 Chair: Jacob Zevenbergen, University of Twente, Netherlands, The The importance of public private partnership in cadastre: Turkish experience 1: FIG, Turkey; 2: Tapu ve Kadastro Genel Müdürlüğü, Turkey A review of public-private partnerships in land administration 1: The University of Melbourne, Australia; 2: World Bank, United States of America; 3: Land Equity International, Australia PPP in land administration - why now and what are the risks and benefits? Ordnance Survey, UK Exploring PPP opportunities for improved Land Administration Reforms, emerging lessons from the Ghanaian Case Office of the President, Ghana From client satisfaction to happiness: the front-office and back-office innovative concession models for fostering land registration in Dubai Universidad de los Andes, Colombia |
04-12: Gender impacts of large-scale investment Location: MC C1-200 Chair: Kerstin Nolte, Leibniz University Hannover, Germany Winners or losers: a gender analysis of the economic and social impact of corporate large-scale land acquisition on rural women in Cameroon 1: University of Buea, Cameroon; 2: University of Yaounde I, Cameroon; 3: Islamic Relief Worldwide, Kenya New research about gender, land and mining in Mongolia: deepening understanding of coping strategies in pastoral communities 1: Mokoro Ltd, United Kingdom; 2: People Centered Conservation (PCC), Mongolia Strengthening women's voices in land governance in the context of commercial pressures on land 1: IIED, United Kingdom; 2: IED Afrique, Senegal |
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 |
||||
5:30pm - 8:00pm |
OAS: Inter-American Network on Cadastre and Property Registry: innovation to improve land governance in Latin America (followed by a cocktail reception) Location: Organization of American States (OAS) - 1889 F St. NW Washington DC Public: By invitation only (Registered participants for the land and Poverty Conference from the LATAM region) Language: Spanish only Deadline to RSVP: Tuesday March 19, 2019 - RSVP |
Red Interamericana de Catastro y Registro de la Propiedad: Innovación para mejorar la gobernanza de la tierra en América Latina (seguido por un coctel de recepción) Location: Organization of American States (OAS) - 1889 F St. NW Washington DC Público: Por invitación (participantes registrados en la conferencia de tierras y pobreza del Banco Mundial) Lenguaje: Español Fecha límite para reservar participación: martes 19 de marzo del 2019 – RSVP |
Date: Wednesday, 27/Mar/2019 | ||||||||
8:00am - 6:00pm |
Posters on display all day; Presenters available 12-2PM and 5.30-6 PM or contact by email Location: MC Atrium |
|||||||
8:30am - 10:00am |
05-01: Private sector roles in Latin America's land administration Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Ivonne Astrid Moreno Horta, WORLD BANK, Colombia Colombia: The private sector’s roles in land tenure formalization in post-conflict areas Ministerio de Agricultura y Desarrollo Rural, Colombia Modernizing land information systems in Panama Ministry of the presidency, Panama Honduras: improving registry and cadastral service delivery through public and private outsourcing Instituto de la Propiedad, Honduras Contracting and direct implementation in systematic land formalization. 25 years of experience in Peru. Global Land Alliance, Peru |
05-02: Implementing land readjustment Location: MC 13-121 Chair: Patrick Lamson-Hall, New York University Marron Institute, United States of America Using land readjustment and FAR bonuses to create high-density development in fringe areas of fast growing cities Auburn University, Auburn, AL, United States of America Surrender and re-alienation of land in Johor, Malaysia: a planning tool and mechanism for sustainable property development 1: Johor State Secretary, Malaysia; 2: Johor Land and Mines Department, Malaysia; 3: Johor State Secretary Incorporation, Malaysia; 4: Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Malaysia Land Assembly through Land Pooling Scheme in Amaravati, Challenges and land value capture for greenfield city development Andhra Pradesh Capital Region Development Authority (APCRDA), India Community-based feedback to improve land pooling for planned urbanization: a case study of Thimphu, Bhutan Asian Development Bank, Philippines |
05-03: Towards the registry of the future Location: MC 2-800 Chair: Nicolás Nogueroles, IPRA-CINDER (International Property Registries Association), Spain Digital street: Exploring the future of land registration through new technologies HM Land Registry, United Kingdom Preventive administration of justice – an economic catalyzer for the future?! – an analysis of the economic relevance of reliable and transparent public registers – Bundesnotarkammer/UINL How to introduce a complete new land registry system in a rapid changing world Dutch Cadastre, Land Registry and Mapping Agency (Kadaster), Netherlands Land Administration and the role of a Land Registrar Network The Open Geospatial Consortium, United States of America |
05-04: Land tenure for sustainable rangeland management Location: MC 4-100 Chair: Liz Alden Wily, independent, Kenya Strengthening traditional institutions of nomadic herders for sustainable management of public rangelands in Mongolia 1: National Federation of Pasture user groups of herders, Mongolia; 2: National University of Agriculture, Mongolia Landscape approach for addressing land use conflicts in pastoral areas: the case of Tanzania 1: Ministry of Lands, Housing and Human Settlements Development, Tanzania; 2: Ministry of Livestock and Fisheries; 3: International Livestock Research Institute Emerging forms of land market participation and implications on pastoralists’ livelihoods in Kenya 1: The University of Nairobi, Kenya; 2: Department of Forest Ecology and Management, SLU, Sweden Securing land rights for marginalized communities - Experience from working with Pastoralist, hunter and gathers in Tanzania OXFAM, Tanzania |
05-05: Impact of informal tenure upgrading Location: MC 5-100 Chair: Remi Jedwab, George Washington University, United States of America High delinquency rates in Brazil’s Minha Casa Minha Vida housing program: Possible causes and necessary reforms 1: University of Washington, United States of America; 2: University of Pennsylvania, United States of America; 3: Independent, Brazil Backyarding: theory and evidence for South Africa 1: University of California, Irvine, United States of America; 2: Independent consultant, South Africa; 3: World Bank, United States of America Impact Evaluations of Informal Settlements Upgrading Interventions: Evidence assessment and new topics for research. 1: Harvard University and Torcuato Di Tella University, Argentina; 2: Torcuato Di Tella University, Argentina Measuring housing deprivations in India: an alternative approach to slum enumeration 1: University of Massachusetts Boston, United States of America; 2: The World Bank Group, United States of America |
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 |
05-07: Improving access to land for urban expansion Location: MC 7-100 Chair: Rebecca Leshinsky, RMIT University, Australia Urban planning orientation tools implementation in Bamako District University of Law and Political Science of Bamako, Mali Urban planning and land shortcoming in Morocco: Aspects of injustice and perspectives 1: National Institute of Urban Planning, Morocco; 2: University Qadi ayyad, Morocco; 3: Institute of agronomy and Veterinary Medicine, Morocco; 4: National Council of Licensed Surveyors, Morocco Urban planning and land issues in the city of Antananarivo Ministry of Regional Development, Building, Housing and Public Works - Madagascar Assessing suitability and acceptability of development plans and town planning schemes in small and medium town: a case of Gujarat CEPT University, India |
05-08: New ways of registering customary land Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Janet L. Banda SC., Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Malawi Addressing fuzzy boundaries in community delimitations for systematic cadaster in Mozambique 1: National Directorate of Lands, Mozambique; 2: EXI, Lda, Mozambique; 3: Verde Azul, Lda, Mozambique; 4: Kadaster, The Netherlands Moving from debate to implementation: Opportunities for Community Land Registration in Kenya Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Kenya “Grazing agreements: negotiated resource access and conflict mediation at the private property-common property nexus in Kenya’s rangelands” Independent Consultant, United States of America Social and institutional innovation in land reform: local land charters in Burkina DID international, Burkina Faso |
05-09: Implementing REDD in practice Location: MC 9-100 Chair: Peter Veit, World Resources Institute, United States of America Practical guide for the creation and management of conservation space 1: National Cooperative Business Association CLUSA International, United States of America; 2: Independent Consultant, Burkina Faso; 3: World 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 1: GIZ, Brazil; 2: FEPOIMT, Brazil; 3: ICV, Brazil |
05-10: Overlapping jurisdictions at the peri-urban fringe Location: MC 10-100 Chair: Shikha Srivastava, Tata Trusts, India Peri-urban land governance: understanding conflicting and competing interests for peri-urban land in Ethiopia Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia The policy incompatibility nexus between urban expansion, land use and land value in Nepal: the case of Pokhara metropolitan city Pokhara University, Nepal Urban expansion and the emergence of informal land markets in Namibia's communal areas University of Namibia, Namibia Who owns the land? Legal pluralism and conflicts over land rights in Ghana Appalachian State University, United States of America |
05-11: Implementing NSDI: From guidelines to practice Location: MC C1-100 Chair: Kathrine Kelm, World Bank, United States of America Research on access and use of geographic information in Moldova 1: Agency for Land Relations and Cadastre of Moldova, Moldova; 2: Kartverket - Norwegian Mapping Authority, Norway UN Integrated Geospatial Information Framework towards achieving the 2030 Agenda – from global to national. Guyana experience. 1: UNFAO, Italy; 2: Guyana Lands and Surveys Commission, Guyana; 3: ConsultingWhere Ltd., United Kingdom Integration of Crowdsourcing and digital platform of National Spatial Data Infrastructure for efficient decision-making Republic Geodetic Authority, Serbia Additional considerations for the successful implementation of a CORS GNSS Network in Developing Countries Leica Geosystems, France |
05-12: Protecting land rights in the course of land acquisition Location: MC C1-200 Chair: Joan Kagwanja, UNECA, Ethiopia Land rights protection in the pulp and paper production system University of São Paulo, Brazil Land acquisition in Malaysia: Policy context and praxis for oil and gas hub project in Eastern Johor. 1: Johor State Secretary, Malaysia; 2: Johor State Secretary Incorporation, Malaysia; 3: Johor Land and Mines Department, Malaysia; 4: Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Malaysia LSLA in Mozambique: impact on rural and urban communities Centro Terra Viva, Mozambique |
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 |
05-14: Research on land markets in Ukraine Location: MC 6-860 Chair: Oleg Nivievskyi, Kyiv Economic Institute/ Kyiv School of Economics, Ukraine VC/webex Do land rental markets contribute to efficient land allocations? Ukrainian experience Leibniz Institute of Agricultural Development in Transition Economies (IAMO), Germany Implications of land market imperfections on policy design Kyiv School of Economics, Ukraine Land market institutions and agricultural productivity in Ukraine Kyiv School of Economics, Ukraine |
|||
10:00am - 10:30am |
Coffee Break Location: Front Lobby |
|||||||
10:30am - 12:00pm |
06-01: Simplified planning for systematic tenure regularization Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Anne Odic, AFD, France Opportunities and challenges of planning to provide tenure security to existing dwellers and ensure effective service delivery in the course of urban expansion Ministry of Land and Physical Planning, Kenya Applying Simplified planning to facilitate title issuance in Lusaka City Hall Lusaka, Zambia Scope for simplifying planning procedures in Zimbabwe Harare City Municipality, Zimbabwe Addressing physical urban planning to speed up tenure regularization Regional Centre for Mapping of Resources for Development (RCMRD), Kenya |
06-02: Emerging technologies, data ownership & privacy Location: MC 13-121 Chair: Josephus van Erp, Maastricht University, Netherlands, The VC Modern technology in land administration - a call for governance and structuring data in view of privatising land administration processes Dutch Cadastre, Land Registry and Mapping Agency (Kadaster), Netherlands, The The Emirates` (legal) framework and governance model for using emerging technologies in Land Administration Dubai Land Department, United Arab Emirates Digital assets & data to be published on a blockchain / What should we do (or not do) with the land administration data? Union Internationale des Huissiers de Justice (UIHJ), Netherlands The Irish challenges to be prepared for future Land Registry Property Registration Authority, Ireland British Columbia's land titles: private, public or somewhere in-between? Land Title & Survey Authority of British Columbia, Canada |
06-03: How to realize the potential of blockchain for land administration? Location: MC 2-800 Chair: John Reynolds, BLOCKCHAIN DIGITAL, United Kingdom Blockchain property titles and land use recording – is it only about trust, or is there space for compliance and enforcement? RMIT University, Australia Smart contracts and land administration: a new framework for property conveyance 1: ChromaWay, Sweden and United States of America; 2: Land Title and Survey Authority, British Columbia, Canada; 3: Swinburne University, Melbourne, Australia Blockchain for Land Administration: Smart Land Registries - a tangible model seeking value for all parties 1: Ordnance Survey, United Kingdom; 2: Trimble Land Administration Solutions Group, USA; 3: IBM, United Kingdom Catalyzing innovation: Dubai real estate blockchain Dubai Land Department, United Arab Emirates An example of the use of the Blockchain by the French Notariat: enforceable copies International Union of Notaries (UINL), France |
06-04: Gender and land policy Location: MC 4-100 Chair: Renee Giovarelli, Resource Equity, United States of America Evaluation results of a program aimed at reducing property grabbing among widows in Uganda International Justice Mission Women's tenure rights across the rural urban continuum: implications for a gender responsive urban land reform in Namibia. 1: Ministry of Land Reform, Namibia; 2: GIZ Office Namibia Community land titling: a contextual analysis of women’s land rights in Kenya Namati, United States of America Innovations to secure women's land rights and build resilience 1: Huairou Commission, United States of America; 2: UCOBAC, Uganda |
06-05: Land markets at the rural-urban fringe Location: MC 5-100 Chair: Songqing Jin, Michigan State Univ./Zhejiang Univ., China, People's Republic of Land transactions in the rural-urban fringes of Dar es Salaam and Nairobi: driving forces, stakeholders and challenges for land governance Sciences Po Bordeaux, France Land market determinants and outcomes in Rwanda: an econometric analysis 1: University of Rwanda, Rwanda; 2: iLand Consulting; 3: RLMUA; 4: DFID How horizontal integration affects transaction costs of rural collective construction land market? An empirical analysis in Nanhai District, Guangdong Province, China Huazhong Agricultural University, China, People's Republic of |
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 |
06-07: Regulations for urban planning Location: MC 7-100 Chair: Peter Mwangi, Walker Kontos, Kenya Spatial planning, urban expansion and land use conversion: a study on urban form of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Vietnamese-German University, Vietnam Exploring options for leaseholds in the Mukuru special planning area 1: Cardiff University, United Kingdom; 2: Akiba Mashinani Trust, Kenya; 3: Katiba Institute, Nairobi Aligning land use policies to community vision in regulating land beyond urban: an initiative in Odisha, India Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, India Spatial Planning as an instrument for the sustainability of investment and efficient provision of services - Comayagua Case 1: Property Institute, Honduras; 2: World Bank, United Stated; 3: Comayagua, Honduras |
06-08: Providing low-cost housing Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Rajan Samuel, Habitat for Humanity India, India Understanding multiplicity of urban governance and planning regulations for a metropolitan region with focus on land and private development – Case study NCR – Delhi, India University of Tokyo, Japan Wrong-Headed policies in the name of the poor: Case of Mumbai’s Cessed-Buildings Mumbai School of Economics and Public Policy (MSE-PP), University of Mumbai, India Community resource mobilization for informal settlements regularization: impact of private community partnership in Tanzania Human Settlements Action (HUSEA) Company Limited, Tanzania |
06-09: Enhancing tenure security for forest land Location: MC 9-100 Chair: Jintao Xu, Peking University, China, People's Republic of Multi-stakeholder forums as innovation for natural resource management? Results from a Realist Synthesis Review of the scholarly literature 1: CIFOR, Peru; 2: University of Maryland, College Park, United States of America; 3: PUCP, Peru Examining relationships in forest governance quality: Insights from forest frontier communities in Zambia´s Miombo ecoregion 1: Thünen Institute of International Forestry and Forest Economics, Hamburg, Germany; 2: Copperbelt University, Kitwe, Zambia Land Tenure Regularization in the Brazilian Amazon: perspectives on identifying social, economic and environmental variables for assessing its impacts 1: Amazon Environmental Research Institute (IPAM); 2: Consulting for Sustainable Development GITEC-IGIP GmbH; 3: Ph.D. Candidate at the University of Amsterdam; 4: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH; 5: National Colonization and Agrarian Reform Institute (INCRA); 6: Universidade 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 1: University of Bern, Switzerland; 2: Modul University, Austria; 3: Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh |
06-10: Ensuring use of public land for public good Location: MC 10-100 Chair: Jorge Espinoza, GIZ, Brazil Social and human rights impact assessment for development project within Phnom Penh, Cambodia Sahmakum Teang Tnaut, Cambodia The right of use on non-awarding state lands, an innovative tool for legal certainty regarding land tenure. COLOMBIA RURAL SAS, Colombia Stimulus for land grabbing and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon 1: Imazon, Brazil; 2: University of Wisconsin, United States of America Allocation of public land and the terra legal regularization program in the Brazilian Amazon 1: Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2: SERFAL, Brazil; 3: GIZ, Brazil; 4: Nexucs; 5: GITEC-IGIP GmbH |
06-11: Land administration: Cases from Asia Location: MC C1-100 Chair: Suzuka Sato, Japan International Cooperation Agency, Japan Land registration innovation and decentralised administrative reform: Success stories from the State of Johor, Malaysia 1: Johor State Secretary, Malaysia; 2: Johor Land and Mines Department, Malaysia; 3: Johor State Secretary Incorporation, Malaysia; 4: Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Malaysia Land registration authority's linkages through the land titling computerization project Land Registration Authority, Philippines A step to grow collateral markets through one window Punjab Land Records Authority, Government of Punjab, Pakistan Interoperability and land administration in Nepal Department of Land Management & Archive, Nepal Registering deeds in Delhi: challenges, innovations and prospects Indian Institute for Human Settlements, India |
06-12: Dealing with the impacts of failed land acquisition Location: MC C1-200 Chair: Jann Lay, GIGA - Germany, Germany Doomed to fail? Why some land-based investment projects fail and others succeed Leibniz University Hannover, Germany Why we need a human right to land – empirical evidence from large-scale land investment deals in Sierra Leone and the Philippines University of Tuebingen, Germany When good innovations go bad Stratigos Consulting, United Arab Emirates |
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 |
06-14: Mapping land rights for better socio-economic outcomes Location: MC 6-860 Chair: Jorge Munoz, World Bank, United States of America Mapping for Peace and Prosperity: Applying participatory mapping in conflict-affected settings. 1: ZOA, Netherlands, The; 2: Cadasta Foundation, United States Protecting rights to clan-based land in Acholi, Northern Uganda: Follow-up report on a research project of the Joint Acholi Sub-Region Leaders’ Forum (JASLF) and Trόcaire University of South Carolina, United States of America Flexible land information system as driver for change, peace and development: The case of post conflict DRC 1: Private Consultant, Kenya; 2: Christian Bilingual University Democratic Republic of Congo; 3: Global Land Tool Network/ UN Habitat, Kenya Putting forest communities on the map: Participatory land-use planning in the Democratic Republic of Congo Rainforest Foundation UK, United Kingdom |
|||
12:00pm - 2:00pm |
Lunch Location: Front Lobby and Preston Lounge |
Women's caucus Location: MC 4-100 |
||||||
12:30pm - 2:00pm |
00-13: New initiatives in urban land policy Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Sameh Naguib Wahba, World Bank, United States of America Expanding urban land access and housing in Ethiopia Ministry of Urban Development and Construction, Ethiopia Land as a key enabler for delivering affordable housing in Kenya Ministry of Transport, Infrastructure, Housing and Urban Development ‘Chile Propietario’ program to regularize informal properties Ministry of National Assets, Chile |
Discussing on the Latin-American land administration ecosystem (light lunch, in Spanish only) Location: MC 13-121 Lounge Chair: Mike Mora, Organization of American States, United States of America In this networking session participants will have an opportunity to hear an introductory lighting talk aimed at sparking informal conversations among the attendees about the state of the Latin-American land administration ecosystem. Also, participants will have the opportunity to contribute with their ideas to strengthen this ecosystem by adding thoughts to a wall dedicated to generate a narrative for the strengthening of the ecosystem in areas of regulation, technologies and institutional arrangements. |
||||||
2:00pm - 3:30pm |
07-01: Land governance in the Arab states Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Wael Zakout, World Bank, United States of America Setting the scene World Bank, United States of America Discussant Dubai Land Department, United Arab Emirates Discussant Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs, Saudi Arabia Discussant Ministry of Finance, Lebanon (Lebanese Republic) Discussant darfur land commission, Sudan Discussant Institute of Agronomy and Veterinary Medicine, NELGA NA Coordinator, Morocco Discussant Land & Water Settlement Commission, Palestinian Territories Discussant Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, Germany Discussant DFID, United Kingdom Conclusions and next steps 1: World Bank, United States of America; 2: UN Habitat, Kenya |
07-02: Farm size & productivity in Africa Location: MC 13-121 Chair: Keith Fuglie, USAID, United States of America Revisiting the farm size-productivity relationship based on a relatively wide range of farm sizes: evidence from Kenya Michigan State University, United States of America Does mechanization reverse the farm-size productivity relationship? Evidence from Ethiopia World Bank, United States of America Can large farm spillovers foster smallholders structural transformation? Evidence from Zambia 1: World Bank, United States of America; 2: IAPRI Does sample truncation affect assess the inverse farm size-productivity relationship? Evidence from Malawi 1: World Bank, United States of America; 2: University of International Business and Economics, Beijing, China, People's Republic of |
07-03: Applications of earth observation in rural areas Location: MC 2-800 Chair: Thomas Esch, DLR, Germany Large-scale land acquisition monitoring with high resolution imagery retrieval and profiling in the ASAP platform 1: Joint Research Centre of the European Commission, Italy; 2: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit, Germany; 3: GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Germany; 4: European Space Agency, United States of America Geospatial big data platform for water for all in Indus basin 1: University of Punjab, Pakistan; 2: Member Water, Planning and Development Department, Govt of Punjab, India; 3: Executive Engineer, Irrigation department, Govt of Punjab, India; 4: Assistant Chief (Coordination), Planning and Development Department, Govt of Punjab, India Realtime digital soil fertility data for fact-based fertilizer selection by smallholder farmers 1: AgroCares, Netherlands, The; 2: SoilCares Foundation, The Netherlands New ways to use remote sensing based phenology and machine learning for mapping irrigated and rainfed agriculture in Africa 1: Remote Sensing Solutions GmbH, Germany; 2: Technical University of Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany; 3: University of Goettingen, Goettingen, Germany Use of Remote sensing technology in small holder supply chains in Asia International Finance Corporation, India |
07-04: Beyond joint titling: Making land institutions gender-sensitive Location: MC 4-100 Chair: Bina Agarwal, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Implementing Uganda's gender strategy on land through issuance of certificates of customary ownership : A case of Kabale and Adjumani districts in Uganda 1: Ministry of Lands, Housing, and Urban Development, Uganda; 2: UN-Habitat/Global Land Tool Network, Kenya When joint ownership is not sufficient to ensure joint registration: Lessons from Cabo Verde 1: Resource Equity, United States of America; 2: Millennium Challenge Corporation, United States of America Inclusive and gender-aware participatory land registration in Indonesia 1: Meridia, The Netherlands; 2: Kadaster International, The Netherlands; 3: ATR / BPN, Indonesia Promoting women’s right to land inheritance through agriculture incentivization 1: Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium; 2: Independent Consultant Storytelling: a powerful strategy to increase women’s access to land/property rights in Uganda and beyond 1: IHC Global, United States of America; 2: Makerere University |
07-05: Emerging technologies, data ownership & privacy Location: MC 5-100 Chair: Josephus van Erp, Maastricht University, Netherlands, The WEBEX The importance and nature of (land administration) data when using emerging technologies Dutch Cadastre, Land Registry and Mapping Agency (Kadaster), Netherlands, The Reflections on the possible privatization of Land Registries by making use of emerging technologies Romanian Land Registry Association, Romania Embracing emerging technologies; preconditions, threshold, possibilities and guarantees International Union of Notaries (UINL), France East-African perspectives and experiences, using modern technology while building up Land Administration systems in the region. Regional Centre for Mapping of Resources for Development (RCMRD), Kenya A brief introduction about the experiences in Brazil, Peru and other countries in South America Global Land Alliance, Peru The experience in Australia with privatising land registries Queensland University of Technology, Australia |
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 |
07-07: How to regulate expropriation for large-scale investments? Location: MC 7-100 Chair: Leon Verstappen, University of Groningen, Netherlands, The Drawing insights from a global comparison of legal safeguards for expropriation World Bank, United States of America Acquiring land compulsorily at any cost? Policy recommendations for improved resettlement outcomes. 1: Ellen De Keyser, Belgium; 2: Consultant Surveyors and Planners, Uganda Assessment of community involvement and compensation money utilization in Ethiopia: Case studies from Bahir Dar and DebreMarkosPeri-urban areas 1: Debre Markos University, Ethiopia; 2: University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU), Austria The question of compensation in the large-scale land acquisition and redistribution in Southern Africa Parliament of Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe |
07-08: Improving housing delivery Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Shishir Ranjan Dash, Tata Trusts, India Social mix and social cohesion using housing mix: a review of the Chilean and British experience 1: University of Reading, United Kingdom; 2: Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile Affordable housing: a land suitability perspective 1: World Bank, Indonesia; 2: CAPSUS, Mexico Harnessing the real estate market for equitable affordable housing provision through land value capture: Insights from San Francisco City, California University of Salford, United Kingdom |
07-09: Enhancing tenure security for forest land Location: MC 9-100 Chair: Dietmar Stoian, ICRAF, France 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 1: World Bank; 2: CIDE; 3: Cornell University Innovation of locally-led adaptive programming in Natural Resource Governance Change in Myanmar Pyoe Pin Institute, Myanmar |
07-10: Using public lands as a catalyst for equitable development Location: MC 10-100 Chair: Devie Chilonga, Mnistry of Lands, housing and urban development, Malawi La privatisation des terres collectives au Maroc: une voie de dynamisation du marché foncier agricole MCA-Morocco, Morocco Institutional reform of the public administration system and its effect on land administration (case study: Republic of Moldova) Agency for Land Relations and Cadastre of the Republic of Moldova, Moldova An examination of spatial planning impact on development of the agricultural land in Kosovo 1: Ministry of Environment and Spatial Planning, Republic of Kosovo; 2: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, Kosovo |
07-11: Land administration: Cases from South America Location: MC C1-100 Chair: Maria Elena Garcia Flores, CINDER, Mexico CADASTRE and access to land 1: Cons Fed del Catastro, Argentine Republic; 2: Dirección Provincial de Catastro e Información Territorial; 3: Dirección de Catastro Municipio Vista Alegre Integrating data for land tenure regularization in the State of Piauí, Brazil 1: Piauí State Land Institute; 2: The World Bank Types of land tenure in Brazil: the first estimate from available geo-referenced information 1: UNICAMP, Brazil; 2: GeoLab- Esalq – USP; 3: Imaflora; 4: SEI; 5: Oxfam; 6: IFSP; 7: IPAM A new approach for the establishment of a regional multipurpose cadastre in La Mojana, Colombia – how to overcome large-scale cadastral operations challenges through technological and methodological innovations 1: GEOFIT, France; 2: IGNFI France Standardization and integration of the electronic real estate registry system of Brazil (SREI): the national operator of SREI (ONR). IRIB, Brazil |
07-12: Enforcing adherence to standards for large land-based investment Location: MC C1-200 Chair: Chris Jochnick, Landesa, United States of America Emerging Practice from the Field: Private sector action on land rights in the upstream 1: Rights and Resources Initiative, United States of America; 2: International Finance Corporation Etranger et accès a la terre en afrique de l'ouest Initiative Prospective Agricole et Rurale, Senegal Due diligence in land acquisition - Lawyers and their responsibilities 1: FAO, Italy; 2: Matrix Chambers, UK |
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 |
07-14: Demarcation of indigenous lands Location: MC 6-860 Chair: Raelene Webb, Murray Chambers, Australia Jurisprudence of the Supreme Federal court of Brazil in the process of demarcation of the indigenous reserve Raposa Serra do Sol 1: Secretary of the association of Notaries and regisrars of te State of Mato Grosso- Brazil; 2: Lowyer; 3: Notary, Brazil; 4: UNICAMP Assessing implementers’ perspective on reform processes: Progress and challenges in formalizing the rights of native communities in Peru CIFOR, Peru Case study: a model for securing the legal recognition of indigenous lands rights in the Democratic Republic of the Congo 1: World Bank, United States of America; 2: REPALEF, Réseau de populations autochtones pour la gestion durable des écosystèmes forestiers de la RDC; 3: LINAPYCO, Ligue nationale des associations autochtones pygmées du Congo |
|||
3:30pm - 3:45pm |
Coffee Break Location: Front Lobby |
|||||||
3:45pm - 5:15pm |
08-01: Land records completion and modernization in Asia Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Mika-Petteri Törhönen, The World Bank, United States of America Indonesia: systematic land regularization and electronic land administration The Indonesia Ministry of Spatial Planning and Agrarian Reform, Indonesia Land policy and administration reform in Nepal Ministry of Land Management, Cooperatives and Poverty Alleviation, Nepal Uzbekistan real property register and cadastre modernization Goskomzemgeodezkadastr, Uzbekistan Property registration in India – Delhi perspective Indian Institute for Human Settlements, India Discussant Punjab Land Records Authority, Government of Punjab, Pakistan Discussant The University of Melbourne, Australia |
08-02: Strengthening professional ethics in the land sector Location: MC 13-121 Chair: Maurice Barbieri, CLGE (Council of European Geodetic Surveyors), Switzerland Worldwide, Regional and local initiatives to regulate professional ethics National Society of Professional Surveyors, United States of America Professional ethics under pressure, how to cope with technical developments CLGE (Council of European Geodetic Surveyors), Switzerland Ethics, from theory to practice CLGE (Comité de Liaison des Géomètres Européens), Belgium |
08-03: Applications of earth observation to assess urban service delivery Location: MC 2-800 Chair: Moses Musinguzi, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda Catalyzing innovation for global urban monitoring from a holistic utilization of big earth data, artificial intelligence and open knowledge 1: German Aerospace Center (DLR), Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany; 2: GISAT s.r.o., Prague, Czech Republic; 3: Brockmann Consult GmbH, Geesthacht, Germany; 4: Terradue Srl, Rome, Italy; 5: European Space Agency (ESA), Frascati, Italy; 6: IT4Innovations – VSB Technical University of Ostrava, Ostrava-Poruba, Czech Republic Earth Observation for supporting urban land use policy implementation GAF AG, Germany Earth Observation – A support for the distributed energy sector IABG mbH, Germany |
08-04: Ways to secure women's tenure in practice Location: MC 4-100 Chair: Janet Edeme, African Union Commission, Ethiopia The impact of land regularization in rural Tanzania; gender, rights and anti- poverty case: the civil society organization’s parallel support to the land tenure support programme 1: We Effect, Tanzania; 2: Tanzania Women Lawyers Association, Tanzania A multi-stakeholder approach to advancing women’s land rights using the SDGs framework: experience from Tanzania Landesa, Tanzania Women’s tenure rights and land reform in Angola Development Workshop, Angola Using institutional cooperation, focusing on Capacity Building, to secure Gender Equality 1: Lantmäteriet, Sweden; 2: Rwanda Land Management and Use Authority, Rwanda |
08-05: Urban land research, land assembly and land markets in China Location: MC 5-100 Chair: Fang Xia, University of International Business and Economics, Beijing, China, People's Republic of Land-constrain-induced poverty and land-capitalization-supported poverty alleviation strategy in China: A case study of Shaanxi Province Xi'an Jiaotong University, United States of America Impact of land certification on land and labor allocation in China 1: Zhejiang University, China, People's Republic of; 2: Australia National University, Australia; 3: Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Science, China, People's Republic of Reduction of industrial land beyond Urban Development Boundary in Shanghai Renmin University of China, China, People's Republic of China |
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 |
08-07: Can building regulations be designed properly? Location: MC 7-100 Chair: Richard Grover, Oxford Brookes University, United Kingdom Process of buildings legalization in Republic of Macedonia from the perspective of the real estate cadastre Agency for Real Estate Cadastre, Macedonia, Former Yugoslav Republic of Guidelines for formalization of informal constructions 1: FIG International Federation of Surveyors, Greece; 2: FIG, United States of America; 3: UNECE WPLA, The Netherlands Between informal and illegal: comparative analysis of non-compliance with planning and building laws Neaman Institue for National Policy Research, Technion, Israel Modernizing planning and development regulations in the Gaza Strip, Palestine 1: UN-Habitat, Palestinian Territories; 2: Palestinian Housing Council, Palestinian Territories |
08-08: Land tenure insecurity and land-related investment Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Michael Kirk, University of Marburg, Germany Customary tenure and agricultural investment in Uganda University of California Davis, United States of America Rural land in Mauritania facing the challenge of development Université de Nouakchott, Mauritania Going for hybrid maize: the importance of land for the success of maize crop insurance in Tanzania Erasmus university Rotterdam, the Netherlands, Netherlands, The Land rights and livelihoods in rural South Africa – a gendered perspective University of Johannesburg, South Africa |
08-09: Expanding land markets and investments Location: MC 9-100 Chair: Cornelis de Zeeuw, Kadaster, Netherlands, The “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 1: DAI, United States of America; 2: BenBen, Ghana |
08-10: Community empowerment to ensure a fair investor negotiations Location: MC 10-100 Chair: Lorenzo Cotula, IIED, United Kingdom WEBEX Legal empowerment in commercial agriculture: can small-scale producers secure their fair share? IIED, United Kingdom Innovative financing solutions for community support in the context of land investments Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment, United States of America Rural development, dynamic political economy and social license: a case study in renewable energy project governance missteps and lessons learned. Acorn International, LLC, United States of America Assessing community capacity to respond to external threats to land tenure Namati, United States of America |
08-11: Land administration: Cases from Eastern Europe Location: MC C1-100 Chair: Mihai Taus, Romanian Land Registry Association, Romania Jointly towards improvement of land administration in Bosnia and Herzegovina 1: Republic Authority for Geodetic and Real Property Affairs, Republic of Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina; 2: Federal Administration for Geodetic and Real Property Affairs, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina; 3: Capacity Building for Improvement of Land Administration and Procedures in Bosnia and Herzegovina - CILAP project Innovative technology combat for still pending privatization, legalization challenges, rooted in the communist regime 1: NIRAS OY; 2: Independent Innovative approaches in Georgian land registration reform National Agency of Public Registry (NAPR), Georgia |
08-12: Improving decision-making on common lands Location: MC C1-200 Chair: Steven Lawry, Center for International Forestry Research, United States of America Responding to the global agenda: valuation of undocumented lands to promote responsible land governance and human rights recognition 1: UN-Habitat/GLTN, Kenya; 2: Independent Consultant, Kenya Securing forest tenure for rural development: an integrated assessment tool 1: The Equator Group, United States of America; 2: World Bank, United States of America; 3: Land Alliance, United States of America; 4: Independent, United States of America Whose land is it anyway? Exploring new ways for consensus building in policy making University of Cambridge, United Kingdom Land rights progress a participatory land governance tool for Cameroon 1: Centre pour l'Environment et Development, Cameroon; 2: International Institute for Environment and Development, Cameroon; 3: Network to Fight Against Hunger |
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 |
08-14: Recognizing indigenous rights Location: MC 6-860 Chair: Hubert M. G. Ouedraogo, DID international, Burkina Faso The rights of indigenous people to the enjoyment of Human Rights to Land and Natural Resources in Uganda. 1: Trocaie Uganda, Uganda; 2: Landnet Uganda; 3: Land Justice Network; 4: Uganda Land Alliance Understanding the key Drivers of Land use and Livelihood dynamics in the Drylands of Kenya: The Case of Fodder production in Isiolo County University of Nairobi, Kenya Land and Pastoralism in Eastern Africa: lessons learned Open Society Initiative for Eastern Africa (OSIEA), Uganda |
|||
5:45pm - 7:15pm |
Spec-21: Launch of publication: “Securing Forest Tenure Rights for Rural Development: An Analytical Framework”. Location: MC 2-800 By invitation only. Please contact: Gsegura@worldbank.org - see also |
|||||||
7:00pm | Poster Board 02-01 Location: MC Atrium Cyber security for Fintech and their role in sustainable development goals TLF Tech Private Limited Handbook for geospatial best practices for land administration GIS/Transport, United States of America Exploring UAS mapping to improve land and resource management in a Native American community 1: University of Florida Geomatics Program, School of Forest Resources and Conservation, Fort Lauderdale, FL, United States of America; 2: University of Florida Geomatics Program, School of Forest Resources and Conservation, Gainsville, FL, United States of America; 3: Land And Natural Resources Division, Forest County Potawatomi, United States of America; 4: Global Land Alliance SOLA open source for improving tenure governance - way forward 1: UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, Italy; 2: COWI A/S, Denmark Blockchain revolution in Georgia National Agency of Public Registry (NAPR), Georgia Masterclass on designing smart contracts for land administration ChromaWay, Sweden and United States of America |
Poster Board 02-02 Location: MC Atrium AI-powered spatio-temporal analytics to detect electricity theft from public road lighting infrastructures and support the efficient use of energy in degraded areas 1: NTUA, School of Surveying Engineering, Spatial Intelligence Research Group; 2: Public Power Corporation S.A; 3: The World Bank National security integrated land data bank for Nigeria OGIS Consult Limited, Nigeria Perceived tenure (in)security in the era of rural transformation: a gender-disaggregated analysis from mozambique 1: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), United States of America; 2: Ethiopian Development Research Institute (EDRI), Ethiopia Adopting data integration and interoperability as a tool for optimizing land and water governance University of Nairobi, Kenya |
Poster Board 02-03 Location: MC Atrium India’s de-urbanization of manufacturing sector World Bank, United States of America Financial accessibility and private investment in developing countries 1: Pan African University, Cameroon; 2: Ecole Supérieure Multinationale des Télécommunications (ESMT) Land access and perceived tenure security in the era of social, economic and environmental dynamics/ transformation in Africa 1: International Food Policy Research Institute; 2: Ethiopian Development Research Institute (EDRI), Ethiopia Centralized traffic control (CTC) for greater Gaborone city NAMA S.A., Greece Neighbor to neighbor: detroit's first property tax delinquency census Quicken Loans Community Fund, United States of America The complementarity of education and use of productive inputs on economic outcomes among smallholder farmers in Africa Center for Development Research, Germany |
Poster Board 02-04 Location: MC Atrium Socioeconomic indices for townships in Myanmar Curtin University, Australia Integrating evaluation into program cycle – opportunities and challenges in land policy reform programs International Center for Evaluation and Development, Kenya NGOs roles in cross-sector collaborations with SMEs and impact investors in developing countries: a values creation approach FAST Finance Alliance for Sustainable Trade, France Land Rights – an investment worth it? Case study from Ghana 1: Meridia; 2: ITC Does tenure security influences soil quality and household resilience? Evidence from Senegal 1: Senegalese Institute for Agricultural Research (ISRA)/ Commission nationale de réforme foncière (CNRF),Senegal; 2: L'Ecole Nationale Supérieure d'Agriculture, Université de Thiès, Senegal; 3: Senegalese Institute for Agricultural Research (ISRA)/ Le Conseil national de régulation de l'audiovisuel (CNRA), Senegal; 4: Senegalese Institute for Agricultural Research (ISRA)/ Centre de Recherches Agricoles de Saint-Louis (CRA), Senegal; 5: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), Italy |
Poster Board 02-05 Location: MC Atrium Innovation for meeting investments and traditional landrights NIRAS, Finland Payments for environmental services on agricultural land: evidence from a choice experiment with tree planting contracts in Ethiopia UNU-MERIT, The Netherlands Digital commodification of agriculture in Colombia: enclosures or collaborative land control mechanisms Lancaster University, Colombia Corporate social responsibility and poverty alleviation: a case study of Wanda Danzhai village 1: University of Southern California, United States of America; 2: Tsinghua University, People's Republic of China Urban land governance and secure tenure in Latin America and the Caribbean: status and actions The New School, United States of America Land governance “AmBisyon 2040” : up-valuing Carp investments, millennial rural-urban inclusive growth Department of Agrarian Reform-Support Services Office, Phillipines |
Poster Board 02-06 Location: MC Atrium Participatory and ecological aspects of rural revitalization in China 1: Hanns Seidel Foundation, Germany; 2: Planungsbüro Spindler, Germany; 3: International Consultant, Germany Innovation in land administration to aid agro-business investment, diversification of the Nigerian economy – Kano approach Kano State Bureau for Land Management, Nigeria Private sector responsibility in supporting sustainable development LE34, Denmark Gender parity via digital land systems 1: IoTask, Zilla Global, EQUALS- United Nations; 2: George Mason University, Zilla Global; 3: UTec, Peru, Zilla Global; 4: Landesa, Zilla Global Land predation, climate change and poverty in Burkina Faso: a computable general equilibrium analysis Pan-African Research Center for Economic and Social Development (CARDES), Burkina Faso The Brazilian Forest Service strategic for conservation, restoration, social and economic local involvement: The Arboretum Program 1: Brazilian Forest Service, Brazil; 2: Public Prosecutor`s Office of the State of Bahia, Brazil |
Poster Board 02-07 Location: MC Atrium Mainstreaming Earth observation in agricultural development – preliminary demonstration results of the EO4SD initiative’s dedicated activity cluster on agriculture and rural development 1: eLEAF, The Netherlands; 2: Nelen & Schuurmans, The Netherlands; 3: GeoVille, Austria; 4: DHI GRAS, Denmark; 5: SpaceTec, Belgium; 6: Satelligence, The Netherlands; 7: ITC, The Netherlands How disruptive innovation can be incubated in any NGO or large business with minimal change to the procurement process IMGeospatial, United Kingdom Innovative private sector initiatives to incentivise public buy-in to land administration services – examples from Ethiopia 1: DAI, United Kingdom; 2: Nathan Associates, United Kingdom Smallholder land registration with the value chain, increasing productivity 1: Meridia, Netherlands; 2: ITC, Netherlands Effects of investment decisions on land formalization for rural households in Colombia Banco de la República, Colombia |
Poster Board 02-08 Location: MC Atrium Land policy and political economy in Nigeria Arconstruct Limited, Nigeria Reforming land registration and administration through innovation in Kenya 1: Ministry of Lands and Physical Planning, Kenya; 2: University of Nairobi, Kenya; 3: Technical University of Kenya, Kenya Effects of investment decisions on land formalization for rural households in Colombia Banco de la República, Colombia Land invasion and urban development in Zambian cities: form, causes, effects and possible solutions 1: Copperbelt University, Zambia; 2: Namibia University of Science and Technology, Namibia Linking land tenure and use, catalyzing land use innovation for grassroots women Action for Women and Awakening in Rural Environment, Uganda |
Poster Board 02-09 Location: MC Atrium Do farmers really like farming? Indian farmers in transition 1: University of Manchester, United Kingdom; 2: Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, India From ministry to farm house - building trust in post conflict rural Colombia by a multilevel and participative approach of land administration 1: Kadaster, Apeldoorn, The Netherlands; 2: Administracion del Territorio Consultores, Lima, Peru; 3: Universidad Distrital, Bogota, Colombia; 4: Esri, Washington DC, United States of America Mismanagement of diversity as bane to effective land administration in Nigeria: the way forward The Federal Polytechnic, Ilaro, Nigeria Land governance in Namibia: challenges and opportunities Namibia University of Science and Technology, Namibia The confluence of land administration and land policy as determinants of formal land accessibility in Nigeria The Federal Polytechnic, Ilaro, Nigeria |
Poster Board 02-10 Location: MC Atrium Land policy distortions, credit constraints, and agricultural productivity: evidence from China’s apple growers Northwest A&F University, People's Republic of China Are farmers really reluctant to land paid withdraw in China? Huazhong University of Science and Technology, People's Republic of China Land tenure dynamics and contributions to livelihood diversification in Baringo County, Kenya 1: University of Nairobi, Kenya; 2: University of Gothenburg, Sweden Access to land and poverty reduction in a rural north western part of Cameroon 1: Cyprus International University, Cyprus; 2: University of Yaounde II, Cameroon Impact of overseas farmland investment on grain import based on difference-in-difference model Huazhong University of Science and Technology, People's Republic of China Integrated development and land planning in rural areas in kenya for improved livelihoods Car Design Research Limited, United Kingdom |
Poster Board 02-11 Location: MC Atrium Rural indebtedness and land tenure-pre colonial, colonial and post colonial legacies University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, United States of America Sustainable land reforms as a comprehensive migration management agenda: a perspective of social inclusion in postcolonial Africa Tübingen University, Germany Land management in Brazil The World Bank, Brazil Assessment of policy frameworks guiding preparation and implementation of resettlement action plans for extractive projects in Kenya Land Development and Governance Institute, Kenya Registration of forgotten lands, publicly owned land Ministry of Lands, Tanzania |
Poster Board 02-12 Location: MC Atrium Achieving fair and equitable tax valuations with fit-for-purpose data strategies IAAO, United States of America Agriculture under conflict – satellite earth observation to measure impact on food security eLEAF, The Netherlands Positioning-as-a-service for fit-for-purpose applications Trimble Inc, United States of America Improving paddy rice statistics in Southeast Asia using area frames Asian Development Bank, Philippines The use of machine learning processes in the deployment of satellite image data The Icon Group Ltd, Ireland Citizens’perceptions on land security: evidences from Senegal Initiative Prospective Agricole et Rurale, Senegal |
Poster Board 02-13 Location: MC Atrium Going beyond capturing and analyzing data: effective and inclusive methods of communicating spatial data 1: Land Portal, Canada; 2: Plan B; 3: University of Twente; 4: Kadaster International Preparing and using satellite images as a mapping tool in difficult tropical environments Niras Consulting AB, Sweden Cadastral mapping using low-cost inertial navigation system Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, India Integration of land tenure monitoring in agricultural development projects in Malawi using geospatial technologies Ministry of Agriculture, Irrigation and Water Development, Malawi Experiences in the application of participatory land information tools for improving tenure security in developing countries United Nations Human Settlements Programme, Kenya Land Electronic Card. Using the Palm Vein system to curb land fraud and forgeries Buganda Land Board, Uganda |
Poster Board 02-14 Location: MC Atrium Monitoring drought and crop loss using satellite imagery on the cloud Radiant Earth Foundation, United States of America Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2 data for Citrus crop management support and water monitoring. 1: Institute of Agronomy and Veterinary Medicine Hassan II, Morocco; 2: National Institute for Agricultural Research, Morocco; 3: National School for Forest Engineering, Morocco Remote sensing and GIS in land use and cover analysis of the northwest zone, Nigeria. Problem identification through change detection 1: University of Lagos, Nigeria; 2: The Federal Polytechnic Ilaro, Nigeria Remote sensing based monitoring of fenced area dynamics around the Dadaab Refugee Camp in Kenya 1: Joint Research Centre of the European Commission, Italy; 2: The Rainforest Foundation UK; 3: Global Governance Programme - European University; 4: University of Nairobi; 5: Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umea Integrated geospatial information framework – partnerships for implementation 1: UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, Italy; 2: World Bank group, USA Speed-up sustainable energy for the Amazonian – remote sensing and participatory mapping as support tool for the global development agenda 1: Center for Remote Sensing of Land Surfaces (ZFL), University of Bonn, Germany; 2: Tratural, Cuenca, Ecuador; 3: AmazonGISnet, Quito, Ecuador |
Poster Board 02-15 Location: MC Atrium Smallholder oil palm intensification, where do we start? World Resources Institute (WRI) Indonesia The link between land markets and sustainable land administration 1: iLand Consulting, United Kingdom; 2: University of Rwanda, Rwanda; 3: Rwanda Land Management and Use Authority, Rwanda; 4: DAI Europe, United Kingdom; 5: DFID Rwanda Formalization of rural land rights transactions; the search for an innovative approach in Ethiopia 1: DAI, Ethiopia; 2: Niras; 3: Ethiopian Economic Association, Ethiopia Fit for purpose in Brazil: a successful test case of fast and affordable land administration in Mato Grosso 1: Universidade Estadual de Campinas - UNICAMP, Brazil; 2: Kadaster International - Netherlands, The Netherlands |
Poster Board 02-16 Location: MC Atrium |
Date: Thursday, 28/Mar/2019 | ||||||||
8:30am - 10:00am |
09-01: Redistributive land reform in the 21st century Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Michael Taylor, International Land Coalition, Italy From fragmentation and elite capture to building new bridges in partnership: repurposing agrarian reform in South Africa in a new era AFRA, South Africa Land reform policy in Indonesia Ministry of Agrarian and Spatial Management/National Land Agency, Indonesia Land reform debate in Indonesia Consortium for Agrarian Reform (KPA), Indonesia Land reform policy in Colombia Colombia Rural, Colombia Land reform policy in Colombia Ministerio de Agricultura y Desarrollo Rural, Colombia |
09-02: Land tenure security and deforestation Location: MC 13-121 Chair: Michael Toman, World Bank, United States of America Indigenous land rights and deforestation: evidence from the Brazilian Amazon The World Bank, United States of America The impacts of a land tenure clarification project on deforestation and forest degradation in Guatemala 1: Boston University, United States of America; 2: Inter-American Development Bank, United States of America |
09-03: Potential and pitfalls of using drone imagery Location: MC 2-800 Chair: Edward Anderson, World Bank group, Tanzania Governance frameworks for the sustainable implementation of UAVs in Rwanda. KU Leuven, Belgium Smart cadaster. Coupling imagery from drones and street-view with proper incentives to promote sustainable urban cadasters in developing countries. 1: Global Land Alliance, Peru; 2: World Bank, USA A study on supporting reservoir management using spatial information for preparations for drought LX Korea Land and Geospatial Informatix Corp., Korea, Republic of (South Korea) |
09-04: Harnessing benefits from urban planning Location: MC 4-100 Chair: Eric Heikkila, University of Southern California, United States of America Contribution of urban green infrastructure to achieve sustainable development goals: an innovative mechanism to bring different actors together World Bank, Ethiopia Inclusive development? Paradox of state-led land development in India 1: Queen's University Belfast, United Kingdom; 2: Architecture, Planning and Environment LTD, United Kingdom Assessment of urban upgrading interventions in mekong delta region in Vietnam 1: World Bank, United States of America; 2: National Economics University, Vietnam |
09-05: SDGs on land: Methodology and reporting Location: MC 5-100 Chair: Sydney Gourlay, World Bank, United States of America VC/ webex Reporting on SDG indicator 1.4.2 for high income countries: the case of the U.S. 1: Landesa, United States of America; 2: Millennium Challenge Corporation, United States of America; 3: USAID, United States of America Considering the multidimensional nature of tenure security in land policies University of East Anglia, UK Measuring perceived tenure insecurity: issues, challenges, and recommendations Landesa, United States of America Discussant (Webex) Food and Agriculture Organization, Italy |
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 |
09-07: Building crowd-sourced data into formal systems Location: MC 7-100 Chair: Achilles Kallergis, New York University, United States of America Is it possible to collect low-cost household data on slum conditions? Evidence from slum dwellers enumerations New York University, United States of America Evidence-based community-driven mapping: Catalyzing city planning and service provision in Muntinlupa and other cities 1: Technical Assistance Movement for People and Environment Inc. (TAMPEI), Philippines; 2: Philippine Action for Community-led Shelter Initiatives Inc. (PACSII), Philippines; 3: Homeless People's Federation Philippines Inc. (HPFPI), Philippines; 4: Global Land Tool Network (GLTN), Kenya “Information is power only if used “-Improving Tenure security in informal settlements using participatory data collection: The case of Informal settlements in Gobabis Namibia Namibia University of Science and Technology Count me in: the case of improving tenure security of slum dwellers in peri-urban Lusaka 1: Lusaka City Council, Zambia; 2: UN Habitat, Kenya; 3: UN Habitat, Zambia |
09-08: Evaluating impacts of tenure interventions Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Heather Huntington, DevLab@Duke, United States of America Evaluating the impact of community forestry practices in Sumatra island, Indonesia 1: World Resources Institute, Indonesia; 2: Northern Arizona University, School of Forestry, United States of America Impact, diffusion and scaling-up of a comprehensive land-use planning approach in the Philippines – Results from a rigorous impact evaluation DEval - German Institute for Development Evaluation, Germany Results from land tenure formalization activities in the Senegal River valley: a mixed-methods evaluation at medium-term Mathematica Policy Research, United States of America |
09-09: Bottom-up approaches: A key to land use planning Location: MC 9-100 Chair: Klaus Ackermann, Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, Germany Increasing access to land for housing for Irula tribal families: Lessons from implementing the Solid Ground Campaign in India 1: Habitat for Humanity International, Philippines; 2: Habitat 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 |
09-10: Land administration: Cases from Africa Location: MC 10-100 Chair: Chris Penrose Buckley, DFID, United Kingdom Appropriateness of land administration domain ontological model for the national land governance and the promotion of foreign investments 1: ANCFCC, Morocco; 2: IAV Hassan II, Morocco; 3: IAV Hassan II, Morocco; 4: ANCFCC, Morocco Scaling up the more systematic land certification method in Madagascar – issuing 106,000 land certificates in seven months 1: Agriculture Growth and Land Management Project, Madagascar; 2: Ministry of Land Management and Land Tenure, Madagascar Indicators' assessment of Land Governance in Morocco: a preliminary study 1: Institute of Agronomy and Veterinary Medecine, Morocco; 2: Graduate Engineers, Morocco Land Sectoral Policy document: the ultimate challenge for efficient land governance. D. R. CONGO Government, Congo, Democratic Republic of the |
09-11: Land as instrument for post-conflict peacebuilding Location: MC C1-100 Chair: David F. Varela, Global Land Alliance, Colombia Housing, land and property (HLP) rights for Syrian women Norwegian Refugee Council, Syria Developing land tenure risk indicators in FCV contexts The World Bank, United States of America Technology, policy, national systems and local civil society: using a mobile application to protect the housing, land and property rights of displaced people in Honduras 1: UNHCR, The Netherlands; 2: UNHCR, Honduras Environmental peacebuilding through participatory social cartography: land, property and social data mapping of ground zero or most affected area to assist Marawi city recover from violent conflict Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), Republic of the Philippines |
09-12: How can large investors be held accountable? Location: MC C1-200 Chair: Samuel Kimeu, Transparency International Kenya, Kenya Open EIA reporting and contracting for sustainable land and natural resource development in Cambodia Open Development Cambodia (ODC), Cambodia Undisclosed: Practical examples of financial sector disclosure and why it’s critical for communities to know who is financing activities on their land Oxfam International, Australia Estimating industrial concession area in the developing world: Results and conclusions Rights and Resources Initiative, United States of America |
|||||
10:00am - 10:30am |
Coffee Break Location: Front Lobby |
|||||||
10:30am - 12:00pm |
10-01: Indigenous tenure for resilience and reconciliation Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Enrique Pantoja, World Bank, United States of America Modelling land-use change for indigenous socio-economic development: Curve Lake First Nation, Canada 1: Natural Resources Canada; 2: University of Waterloo, Canada Innovations in Indigenous land tenure in Canada: Reconciliation as the catalyst Natural Resources Canada, Canada Exploring pluralism: building resilience and respect Murray Chambers, Australia First nations' post-counter map praxis Royal Roads University, Canada |
10-02: How to achieve the SDG goals and global commitments on land? Location: MC 13-121 Chair: Clarissa Augustinus, Independent, Ireland Global donor working group on land: what is the way forward? DFID, United Kingdom Discussant The World Bank, United States of America Discussant GROOTS Kenya, Kenya Discussant Ministry of Land Management, Cooperatives and Poverty Alleviation, Nepal Discussant Tetratech, United States of America Discussant International Land Coalition, Italy Closing remarks Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, Ethiopia |
10-03: Potential and pitfalls of using drone imagery Location: MC 2-800 Chair: Tobias Landmann, Remote Sensing Solutions GmbH, Germany Drones and the structure from motion (SfM) technique in cadastral surveying MicroAerial Projects LLC, United States of America Drone-based geomatics land data acquisition methodology - case study: city of Adama and rural area of Mojo, Ethiopia 1: Hojung Solutions CO. LTD, Korea, Republic of (South Korea); 2: Ministry of Urban Development and Housing, The Government of Ethiopia Evaluation of UAV-based technology to capture land rights in Kenya: displaying stakeholder perspectives through interactive gaming 1: University of Twente ITC, The Netherlands; 2: Swinburne Business School, Australia; 3: Kadaster International, The Netherlands The challenges and opportunities of AI and drone technology in land management and poverty assessment 1: Teamnet, Romania; 2: Autonomous Systems, Romania |
10-04: Harnessing the scope for incremental tenure upgrading Location: MC 4-100 Chair: Abdu Muwonge, World Bank, Kenya Formalizing the informal through incremental tenure strengthening in urban Battambang: Experience on tenure transformation in Cambodia 1: Habitat for Humanity International, Philippines; 2: Habitat for Humanity, Cambodia The Odisha Liveable Habitat Mission: The process and tools behind the world’s largest slum titling project 1: Cadasta Foundation, United States of America; 2: Tata Trusts, India; 3: Housing and Urban Development Department, Government of Odisha State, India Urban landholding registration in Ethiopia: law and practice Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia |
10-05: The role of land in structural transformation Location: MC 5-100 Chair: Jonathan Conning, Hunter College and The Graduate Center, CUNY, United States of America Poverty, Inequality, and Agriculture in the EU The World Bank, United States of America Small farms, large farms and international productivity differences 1: The Graduate Center, City University of New York, United States of America; 2: Hunter College, City University of New York, United States of America The misallocation of land and other factors of production in India World Bank, United States of America At what price? Price supports, agricultural productivity, and misallocation University of Southern California, United States of America |
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 |
10-07: New aspects of land reform in Africa Location: MC 7-100 Chair: Michael Becker, GIZ - Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Internationale Zusammenarbeit, Kosovo Using remote-sensed data and machine learning to measure the impact of Zimbabwe's Fast Track Land Reform Programme on crop cultivation and vegetation quality 1: Stellenbosch University, South Africa; 2: Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), Bonn, Germany Land reform policy-induced access to agricultural land and nutritional outcomes in Zimbabwe University of Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe Building a National Spatial Data Infrastructure one step at a time- the case for Zambia Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources, Zambia Assessing communal land use management related policy /legislative setting and applications in Bir-Temicha watershed, upper Blue Nile Basin, Ethiopia GiZ, Africa Union, Ethiopia |
10-08: Evaluating impacts of tenure interventions Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Andreas Lange, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, Germany Endline evaluation findings for USAID’s responsible land-based investment pilot in Mozambique 1: NORC at the University of Chicago, United States of America; 2: Management Systems International, United States of America; 3: United States Agency for International Development, United States of America The impacts of Second-Level Land Certification (SLLC) in Ethiopia: empirical evidence using panel data 1: International Food Policy Research Institute, United States of America; 2: Ethiopian Development Research Institute, Ethiopia Mobilizing for title: A mixed-methods randomized evaluation of a homestead land rights initiative in Bihar, India 1: Northwestern University, United States of America; 2: Deshkal Society, India Certified to stay? Experimental evidence on property rights and migration in Benin 1: World Bank, United States of America; 2: Agence Française de Développement, France |
10-09: Capacity building: Lessons from experience Location: MC 9-100 Chair: Charl-Thom Hilgardt Bayer, Namibia University of Science and Technology, Namibia Equal partnership in the capacity building project Eduland2: conceptual design, implementation, successes, challenges & lessons learnt 1: University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria; 2: Debre Markos University, Ethiopia; 3: Technische Universitaet Wien, Austria; 4: Bahir 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 1: Technical University of Munich, Germany; 2: Independent Consultant, South Africa; 3: UN-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 1: KU Leuven, Belgium; 2: RMIT University, Australia; 3: Hansa Luftbild AG, Germany; 4: INES Ruhengeri, Rwanda; 5: Leiden University, The Netherlands |
10-10: Land administration: Cases from Africa Location: MC 10-100 Chair: Dominik Wellmann, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, Germany From registration to sustainability: developments in Rwanda Rwanda Land Management and Use Authority, Rwanda EDOGIS comes online, an evaluation GIS/Transport, United States of America Piloting urban land systematic adjudication and registration in Ethiopia: 1: Federal Urban Land and Landed Property Registry, and Information Agency, Ethiopia; 2: IGN France International, France The innovative national rural land administration information system of Ethiopia 1: Hansa Luftbild AG, Germany; 2: Ministry of Argriculture and Natual Resources, Ethiopia; 3: NIRAS, Finland; 4: IINTAPS, Ethiopia |
10-11: Remote sensing and deep learning for agricultural productivity Location: MC C1-100 Chair: Felix Rembold, Joint Research Centre of the European Commission, Italy Use of earth observation and land parcel identification in supporting the implementation of the common agricultural policy Joint Research Centre of the European Commission, Italy Satellite crop monitoring within World Bank project on land management transparency in Ukraine 1: Space Research Institute of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine and State Space Agency of Ukraine; 2: University of Kent/ KEI at KSE, United Kingdom; 3: National Technical University of Ukraine, Ukraine; 4: University of Maryland College Park, United States of America; 5: EOS Data Analytics, Ukraine Proximate sensing of food types and land uses in Thailand using street-level photography and deep learning University at Buffalo, United States of America |
10-12: Large investments: Protecting human rights & environment Location: MC C1-200 Chair: Ward Anseeuw, International Land Coalition, Italy The ASEAN guidelines on promoting responsible investment in food, agriculture and forestry International Institute for Sustainable Development, Switzerland Private law and agricultural development – Improving agricultural land investment contracts and making them consistent with the VGGT and CFS-RAI Principles 1: UNIDROIT, Italy; 2: FAO, Italy Agricultural investments under international investment law 1: Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment, United States of America; 2: International Institute for Sustainable Development, Canada; 3: International Institute for Environment and Development, United Kingdom Undermining justice: The investment treaty regime and affected third parties Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment, United States of America |
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 |
||||
12:00pm - 2:00pm |
Lunch Location: Front Lobby and Preston Lounge |
Women's caucus Location: MC 4-100 |
||||||
12:30pm - 2:00pm |
00-15: Climate change, forest landscape restoration and tenure Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Robert Nasi, CIFOR, Indonesia Mitigation the effects of climate change requires catalyzing ecological restoration from below and above. This session discusses public and private initiatives and incentives around forest landscapes, while focussing on lessons learned from implementing law and policy towards strengthening community rights to land and forests. VC Scramble for land rights: reducing inequity between communities and companies World Resources Institute, United States of America Madagascar experience with role of tenure in forest restoration Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development, Madagascar Role of tenure in protecting and restoring the Amazon forests Imazon, Brazil Lessons from tenure and gender research for restoration CIFOR, Peru Discussant Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, Germany Discussant World Wide Fund for Nature International (WWF International), Singapore |
|||||||
2:00pm - 3:30pm |
11-01: Round table: Innovative land policies for sustainable development Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Klaus Deininger, World Bank, United States of America The importance of land reform for agricultural transformation Ministry of State Property, Surveys and Land Tenure, Cameroon Enhancing land tenure security and functioning of land markets in Zambia Ministry of Local Government, Zambia Towards secure land rights for all in Uganda: Remaining challenges and ways of monitoring progress Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Uganda Key challenges to advancing land tenure security in Malawi Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Malawi |
11-02: Political economy of tenure change Location: MC 13-121 Chair: Jonathan Conning, Hunter College and The Graduate Center, CUNY, United States of America Market access, property rights and small-holder farming in colonial Southern Rhodesia 1: Stellenbosch University, South Africa; 2: Institute of Labor Economics (IZA), Bonn, Germany The role of informal institutions in change: land reform in urban and peri-urban Ghana Harvard, United States of America Customary institutions and customary land tenure: Regulating dualism to inhibit land-related conflicts? 1: World Bank, United States of America; 2: Leiden University, The Netherlands The legacy of Mexican land and water in California 1: University of California, Santa Barbara and NBER, United States of America; 2: Indiana University, United States of America |
11-03: Improving interoperability of registries & open data access Location: MC 2-800 Chair: Connie Fair, Land Title & Survey Authority of British Columbia, Canada Local Land Charges - Laying the foundation of a new national digital service. HM Land Registry, United Kingdom Digitalization of public registers and the role of legal professionals – a connection for the future GIZ/Bundesnotarkammer, Germany Modern technology in land administration - a call for governance and structuring data in view of privatising land administration processes Dutch Cadastre, Land Registry and Mapping Agency (Kadaster), Netherlands |
11-04: Demand for and impacts of land tenure regularization Location: MC 4-100 Chair: Jennifer Lisher, Millennium Challenge Corporation, United States of America The socio-economic impact of implementing land registration and land information systems in Saudi Arabia 1: George Mason University, United States of America; 2: Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Crop prices and the demand for titled land: evidence from Uganda The World Bank, United States of America The effects of land title registration on tenure security, investment and production: evidence from Ghana 1: World Bank, United States of America; 2: Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research, Ghana; 3: Northwestern University, Department of Economicsm, United States of America Early lessons from the evaluation of land management reforms in Cabo Verde Mathematica Policy Research, United States of America |
11-05: Land and water governance Location: MC 5-100 Chair: Marie-Laure Lajaunie, World Bank, United States of America Linking irrigated land and water scarcity: a global view World Bank, United States of America Land and water: the rights divergence SPRL KH & Associates, Belgium Intensification of irrigated agriculture: the case of the Boudnib plain in Morocco 1: Independent consultant, Morocco; 2: Agroconcept, Romania; 3: INRA SAD, ISARA Lyon, France; 4: IAV Hassan II, Morocco Irrigation Modernization in Spain: what influences the Effects on Water? 1: ICATALIST, Spain; 2: Valladolid City Council, Spain; 3: Duero River basin agency, Spain |
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 |
11-07: Using data and planning to improve urban resilience Location: MC 7-100 Chair: Allan Cain, Development Workshop, Angola Cities and good urban land management practice as a catalyst for climate change adaptation in developing countries: case of Blantyre city, Malawi Blantyre City Council, Malawi Developing voluntary gender responsive relocation policy guidelines to support sustainable urban development 1: Habitat for Humanity International, United States of America; 2: University of East London |
11-08: Improving access to land for the youth Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Violet Shivutse, HUAIROU COMMISSION, Kenya An assessment of youth land rights in rural Liberia 1: Landesa, United States of America; 2: Development Education Network, Liberia Harnessing the potential for rural youth-inclusive agri-food systems livelihoods: A landscape analysis Mississippi State University, United States of America Land access and youth spatial and occupational mobility in Africa: the case of Nigeria 1: International Food Policy Research Institute, United States of America; 2: International Food Policy Research Institute, Nigeria |
11-09: Promising initiatives to build capacity Location: MC 9-100 Chair: Diane Dumashie, International Federation of Surveyors - FIG, United Kingdom 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 |
11-10: Land administration: Cases from Africa Location: MC 10-100 Chair: Anthony Burns, Land Equity International, Australia Data conversion and integration in the implementation of national land information systems in Uganda and Tanzania IGN FI, Uganda National land information system as a catalyst for the greater integration of spatial data in Uganda 1: Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development (MLHUD), Republic of Uganda; 2: IGN FI, Uganda Implementation of an integrated land information management system (ILMIS) for Tanzania 1: IGN FI, United Kingdom; 2: Prime Minister's Office, The United Republic of Tanzania; 3: Innola Solutions, United States of America The use of modified data capture tool for securing Land and resource rights for Customary tenure in Uganda Ministry of Lands,Housing and Urban Development, Uganda |
11-11: Resolving dispute over land Location: MC C1-100 Chair: Jonathan Lindsay, World Bank, United States of America The impact of land corruption on human rights. insights from transparency international 's land and corruption in Africa programme 1: Transparency International Zimbabwe; 2: Transparency International Kenya; 3: Ghana Intergrity Intiative; 4: Corruption Watch An analysis of dispute resolution systems as a means to fighting land corruption and promotion of access to justice – the case of Kenya, Ghana and Zimbabwe 1: Transparency International, Kenya; 2: Ghana Integrity Initiative, Ghana; 3: Transparency International, Zimbabwe Redress for land rights violations and the legal empowerment agenda 1: International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), United Kingdom; 2: Tanzania Natural Resources Forum (TNRF), Tanzania; 3: Global Legal Action Network (GLAN) Bylaws to improve land value and conflict resolution experience in Tanzania: Tanzania Natural Resource Forum, Tanzania |
11-12: Gathering the data needed to assess large farm productivity Location: MC C1-200 Chair: Daniel Ayalew Ali, World Bank, United States of America Root for the tubers: extended-harvest crop production and productivity measurement in surveys 1: The World Bank, Italy; 2: University of Malawi; 3: Consultant How much can we trust farmer self-reported data on crop varieties? Experimental evidence using DNA fingerprinting of cassava varieties in Malawi 1: The Living Standards Measurement Study, Development Data Group, the World Bank, Italy; 2: CGIAR Independent Science and Partnership Council’s Standing Panel on Impact Assessment, Italy; 3: University of Canberra, Australia; 4: International Institute of Tropical Agriculture Malawi; 5: Chitedze National Agricultural Research Institute, Malawi; 6: CAVA2, Malawi Land measurement bias: comparisons from GPS, self-reports and satellite data 1: Northwestern University, USA; 2: Asian Development Bank, Philippines Assessing the impact of systematic measurement error in farmer-reported crop production on the scale-productivity relationship: evidence from a survey experiment in Mali The World Bank, Italy From the ground up: integrating survey and geospatial data for improved soil fertility measurement at scale World Bank, Italy |
|||||
3:30pm - 4:00pm |
Coffee Break Location: Front Lobby |
|||||||
4:00pm - 5:00pm |
Closing Plenary Location: Preston Auditorium Chair: Albert Zeufack, World Bank, United States of America Conference wrap-up World Bank, United States of America Lessons from the conference for land policy in Africa Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Malawi Takeaways on ways for strengthening land governance in LAC IRIB, Brazil Lessons for the land administration profession FIG- International Federation of Surveyors, Germany Next frontiers for research on land policy and implementation Peking University, China, People's Republic of Opportunities for leveraging the private sector IFC, United States of America Closing remarks World Bank, United States of America |
Date: Friday, 29/Mar/2019 | ||||||||
8:55am - 4:00pm |
FT-1: Field Trip I: Commissioner of Revenue’s office in Stafford County (Virginia, USA Location: Stafford county, Virginia You will gain a first-person perspective of how Stafford County, Virginia, a local U.S. county, administers land, values properties, and ensures fair and equitable taxation. Join us for a short trip south of Washington, D.C. to the peri-urban community of Stafford, for a briefing co-hosted by Scott Mayausky, Commissioner of Revenue for Stafford County, and also from the International Association of Assessing Officers (IAAO). Lunch, transportation, and a tour of the George Washington’s boyhood home is included in the $29 registration fee. Pre-registration required via: www.iaao.org/wbc19 |
|||||||
8:59am - 12:30pm |
Consultation DRC: Consultation: Lessons learned on preventing and addressing land-related conflict in East DRC Location: MC 13-121 By invitation only: please contact: Hans.Raadschilders@minbuza.nl Translation French-English |
|||||||
9:00am - 10:30am |
12-01: Using drones for land use mapping and risk assessment Location: MC C1-100 Using drones for land use mapping and risk assessment World Bank group, Tanzania |
12-02: Analyzing and improving land conflict resolution mechanisms - sharing experiences from the GIZ Global Program Responsble Land Policy Location: MC C1-200 Analyzing and improving land conflict resolution mechanisms - sharing experiences from the GIZ Global Program Responsible Land Policy Independent Expert, Germany |
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 |
12-04: Guidelines on resilience and land administration Location: MC 8-100 Guidelines on resilience and land administration World Bank, United States of America |
12-05: Innovative grassroots women led tools for gender responsive land governance Location: MC 9-100 Innovative grassroots women led tools for gender responsive land governance 1: HUAIROU COMMISSION, United States of America; 2: UCOBAC, Uganda |
12-06: National Land Observatories: a tool for transparency, accountability, and informed decision making over land for all Location: MC 10-100 National Land Observatories: a tool for transparency, accountability, and informed decision making over land for all 1: CIRAD / International Land Coalition, Italy; 2: CIRAD / International Land Coalition, Senegal; 3: IPAR, Senegal; 4: CIRAD / ISRA-BAME, Madagascar; 5: CIRAD / Observatoire foncier Madagascar |
12-07: Analyzing land use change using Google Earth Engine -I- Location: MC 6-860 Chair: Brad Bottoms, New Light Technologies, United States of America Analyzing land use change using Google Earth Engine -I- New Light Technologies, United States of America |
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 |
12-09: Promoting women’s land rights in land investment in Tanzania - using RIPL engendered guidebooks Location: MC 2-850 Promoting women’s land rights in land investment in Tanzania - using RIPL engendered guidebooks Landesa, Tanzania |
||||||||
9:45am - 12:00pm |
FT-II: Field trip II: Washington DC - Infrastructure financing, taxation and urban revitalization of the Wharf/southwest waterfront Location: The Wharf; Washington DC |
|||||||
10:30am - 11:00am |
Coffee Break Location: Front Lobby |
|||||||
11:00am - 12:30pm |
13-01: How land professionals can contribute to making the SDGs a reality Location: MC C1-100 How land professionals can contribute to making the SDGs a reality 1: RICS, United Kingdom; 2: FIG, United Kingdom |
13-02: Using machine learning for property valuation Location: MC C1-200 Using machine learning for property valuation 1: World Bank, United States of America; 2: World Bank, United States of America |
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 |
13-04: "Its4land" - innovative geospatial tools for fit-for-purpose land rights mapping Location: MC 8-100 "Its4land" - innovative geospatial tools for fit-for-purpose land rights mapping 1: University of Twente ITC, Netherlands; 2: Hansa Luftbild AG; 3: Katholieke Universiteit Leuven; 4: Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität; 5: Esri Rwanda Ltd; 6: Institute of Applied Sciences INES Rwanda; 7: Bahir Dar University BDU Ethiopia; 8: Technical University Kenya TUK Kenya |
13-05: Starting with women: tools for empowerment Location: MC 9-100 Starting with women: tools for empowerment 1: Resource Equity, United States of America; 2: Cadasta, United States of America; 3: Cadasta, France |
13-06: Enabling voices, demanding rights: A guide to gender-sensitive community engagement in large-scale land-based investment in agriculture Location: MC 10-100 Enabling voices, demanding rights: A guide to gender-sensitive community engagement in large-scale land-based investment in agriculture 1: Oxfam International; 2: International Institute for Sustainable Development, IISD, Switzerland |
13-07: Analyzing land use change using Google Earth Engine -II- Location: MC 6-860 Chair: Brad Bottoms, New Light Technologies, United States of America Analyzing land use change using Google Earth Engine -II- New Light Technologies, United States of America |
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 |
13-09: How to conduct impact evaluation of land tenure and governance interventions, from theory to practice Location: MC 2-850 How to conduct impact evaluation of land tenure and governance interventions, from theory to practice 1: IFAD, Italy; 2: UN-Habitat, Kenya; 3: MCC, United States of America |
||||||||
12:30pm - 1:30pm |
Lunch Location: Front Lobby |
|||||||
1:30pm - 3:00pm |
14-01: Build a blockchain land record register Location: MC C1-100 Build a blockchain land record register Medici Land Governance, United States of America |
14-02: The Land Matrix: An open online tool to collect, visualize and provide information about large-scale land acquisitions and to support decentralized land observatories. Location: MC C1-200 The Land Matrix: An open online tool to collect, visualize and provide information about large-scale land acquisitions and to support decentralized land observatories. GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies / Land Matrix Initiative, Germany |
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 |
14-04: Practical approaches to implementing and monitoring free, prior and informed consent processes Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Luis Felipe Duchicela, Equitable Origin, United States of America Practical approaches to implementing and monitoring free, prior and informed consent processes Equitable Origin, United States of America |
14-05: A Women Land Rights scorecard, tool for monitoring implementation of African Union Instruments at country level, A case of eight countries Location: MC 9-100 |
14-06: The East African community model contract for farmland investments: ensuring responsible investment in land in east africa. Location: MC 10-100 The East African community model contract for farmland investments: ensuring responsible investment in land in east africa. 1: East African Community - EAC; 2: International Institute for Sustainable Development - IISD, Mali |
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 |
14-09: Tackling land corruption risks to achieve the SDGs. Location: MC 2-850 Tackling land corruption risks to achieve the SDGs. 1: Transparency International Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe; 2: Transparency International Zimbabwe; 3: Ghana Integrity Intiative; 4: Transparency International Kenya; 5: Corruption Watch |