Session Overview |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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10:00am - 10:30am |
Coffee Break Location: Front Lobby |
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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 |
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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 |
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12:00pm - 2:00pm |
Lunch Location: Front Lobby and Preston Lounge |
Women's caucus Location: MC 4-100 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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3:30pm - 3:45pm |
Coffee Break Location: Front Lobby |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |