Submissions Accepted for Presentation at the World Bank Land Conference 2024
The conference agenda provides an overview and details of sessions. In order to view sessions on a specific day or for a certain room, please select an appropriate date or room link. You may also select a session to explore available abstracts and download papers and presentations.
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Session Overview | |
Location: MC 8-100 |
Date: Tuesday, 14/May/2024 | |
8:00am - 10:00am |
03-01: Lessons from evaluating titling interventions and implications for the future Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Jennifer Lisher, World Bank, United States of America Reviewing the evidence on land: An overview of land impact evaluation literature and lessons learned 1: University of Pennsylvania, United States of America; 2: World Bank Lessons learned from MCC land evaluations Millennium Challenge Corporation, United States of America Land regularization and agricultural productivity: an empirical study in Andean countries Interamerican Development Bank, United States of America Quasi-experimental evidence on the impact of land regularization: Urban and rural findings from Mozambique 1: University of Pennsylvania, United States of America; 2: Social Impact; 3: Cloudburst Group |
10:30am - 12:30pm |
03-02: Do institutional design and state capacity affect demand for property title and sustainability?? Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Chris Penrose-Buckley, Foreign, Commonwealth & development Office of the United Kingdom (FCDO), United Kingdom Who wants property rights? Conjoint evidence from Senegal Stanford University, United States of America State reach and gender norms: Examining the uptake of equitable land rights in Malawi 1: Boston College, United States of America; 2: University College London; 3: University of Gothenburg Why land registration systems fail.The case of Torrens in USA University Pompeu Fabra (UPF), Barcelona Spain Tanzania demand for documentation study: who pays for land documents, and why? 1: NORC at the University of Chicago, United States of America; 2: New America, United States of America; 3: DAI, United States of America; 4: LTA NGO, Tanzania |
1:30pm - 3:30pm |
03-03: Can lower-cost approaches to rural land titling increase tenure security? Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Jill Pike, Millenium Challenge Cooperation, United States of America The effects of tenure security on women's empowerment and food security: Evidence from a land administration program in Ecuador 1: Inter-American Development Bank, United States of America; 2: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, United States of America The efficiency of customary land tenure systems in resource allocation and their impact on well-being KDI School of Public Policy and Management, Korea, Republic of (South Korea) The challenges of legal recognition of agropastoralists' land rights in Madagascar 1: CIRAD, Madagascar; 2: Think Tany; 3: ED GRND; 4: CIDST; 5: ESSA-Forêt; 6: CIFOR Improvement of land governance on Mailo tenant lands in Uganda 1: The Cloudburst Group, United States of America; 2: University of Pennsylvania, United States of America; 3: The World Bank |
4:00pm - 6:00pm |
03-04: Developing financial instruments to make climate mitigation pay Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Stephane Hallegatte, World Bank, United States of America Global forest carbon: Policy, economics and finance Michigan State University, United States of America A jurisdictional framework for monetizing future values of emissions reductions from avoided deforestation: An application to Brazil 1: American University, United States of America; 2: The World Bank; 3: IFC The elephant in the room: land governance challenges of climate change mitigation TMG Research, Germany Effective governance structures for integrated carbon farming projects: evidence from Kenya University of Bonn, Germany |
Date: Wednesday, 15/May/2024 | |
8:00am - 10:00am |
03-05: Using new data to inform urban policies: Bridging the gap between theory and practice Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Tanner Regan, George Washington University, United States of America Building foundations for smarter cities: A data ecosystem approach 1: World Bank, Mozambique; 2: World Bank, City Planning Labs Global Beyond the Surface: Uncovering the complex interplay of intra-urban inequality in developing countries World Bank Group From Pixels to Policy: Decoding urban morphology and policy influences 1: World Bank Group; 2: German Aerospace Center (DLR) New research avenues on urban expansion and land commodification in the Global South. 1: IRD - French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development, France; 2: University Gustave Eiffel, Paris, France; 3: CNRS - French National Centre for Scientific Research; 4: IRD - French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development, France |
10:30am - 12:30pm |
03-06: Improving effectiveness of documenting land rights in Africa Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Joan Kagwanja, UNECA - African Union, Ethiopia Land taxation of peri-urban agricultural concessions in Kinshasa: towards an incentive model for agricultural production 1: University of Kinshasa (R.D.Congo.); 2: Institute of Agronomic Studies of Mvuazi at Kongo Central (ISEA / Mvuazi); 3: Multina-DMK Studies office; 4: Ministry of Land Affairs, Democratic Republic of Congo Bringing Rural Land Administration Services to the farmers Doorsteps Ministry of Agriculture, Ethiopia Comparative analysis of land policy instruments to tackle land fragmentation in the face of mounting climate risks Ministry of Agriculture, Bahir Dar University Land reform in Madagascar: Rationales, achievement and institutional Changes 1: CIRAD & Think Tany, Madagascar; 2: FAO, Madagascar; 3: CIRAD |
1:30pm - 3:30pm |
03-07: Institutional arrangements to facilitate access to housing Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Amrita Kulka, University of Warwick, United Kingdom Institutional analysis of Urban Land and Housing Policy shift in a metropolitan region, Case National Capital Region, Delhi, India Department of Architecture, Planning and Design, IIT(BHU), Varanasi, India Cultivated land expropriation in China ─ the roles of agglomeration and government fiscal deficits 1: Agricultural Economics and Rural Policy Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, the Netherlands; 2: Development Economics Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, the Netherlands.; 3: China Academy of Resources, Environment and Development, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing, China Farmland regulation, structural change and agricultural development: evidence from Chongqing land coupon reform The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong S.A.R. (China) Do mandatory disclosures squeeze the lemons? The case of housing markets in India 1: University of Manchester, United Kingdom; 2: CSEP India |
4:00pm - 6:00pm |
03-08: Causes and consequences of informality in peri-urban land markets Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Dag Einar Sommervoll, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway Analyzing the impact of land expropriation program on farmers’ livelihood in urban fringes of Bahir Dar, Ethiopia 1: University of Bologna, Italy; 2: Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia Informal land markets and ethnic kinship in sub-Saharan African cities 1: The World Bank, United States of America; 2: Gustave Eiffel University, Land management and urban sprawl in Nigeria World Bank, United States of America Climate change, urban expansion, and food production World Bank, United States of America |
Date: Thursday, 16/May/2024 | |
8:00am - 10:00am |
03-09: Using property taxation as basis for a social contract Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Stamatis Kotouzas, World Bank, Korea, Republic of (South Korea) Building comprehensive property tax systems in lower-income countries: ‘Cadaster-First’ versus ‘Property Tax-First’ approaches 1: University of Toronto/Local Government Revenue Initiative, Canada; 2: Local Government Revenue Initiative, Canada Strengthening the fiscal contract by linking property tax reform and participatory budgeting in Freetown, Sierra Leone 1: University of Toronto/Local Government Revenue Initiative, Canada; 2: International Growth Centre, Sierra Leone; 3: University of California - Los Angeles (UCLA); 4: Centre for the Study of African Economies, Oxford University Should local and traditional authorities collaborate in raising property tax? A study of property owner preferences in Zambia Local Government Revenue Initiative, University of Sussex, World Bank Empowering Indian cities to drive climate action: Expanding fiscal space through property tax reforms Janaagraha Centre for Citizenship and Democracy, India |
10:30am - 12:30pm |
03-10: New ways of land valuation for effective property taxation Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Rajul Awasthi, World Bank, Ethiopia Land value capture: guidance for practitioners World Bank, United States of America The Netherlands study into discrepancy between assessed values and market prices 1: University of Twente, Netherlands, The; 2: Netherlands Council for Real Estate Assessment Land value chain for property tax administration Terra Vital, South Africa Analyzing factors affecting land prices in urbanized areas using machine learning: A basis for future 3D property valuations 1: Building 4.0 CRC, Caulfield East, Victoria, Australia; 2: Centre for Spatial Data Infrastructures and Land Administration, Department of Infrastructure Engineering, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; 3: Department of Infrastructure Engineering, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
1:30pm - 3:30pm |
03-11: Addressing the challenges of putting property tax reform in practice Location: MC 8-100 Chair: Rajul Awasthi, World Bank, Ethiopia The key for a continuous cadastre updating is a gradual progressive tax increase. Bogota, Colombia. BOGOTA ENERGY GROUP, Colombia Improving property tax collection in Zambia World Bank, Ethiopia Nigeria - moving forward from establishing the foundations of property tax Government of Nigeria, Nigeria |
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