Princetonlaan 8a, 3584 CB, Utrecht landac.geo@uu.nl

World Bank | Seeking NGOs, governments, donors, and private sector firms with interventions to improve women’s land tenure security

The World Bank Africa Gender Innovation Lab (GIL) is seeking NGOs, governments, donors, and private sector firms with interventions designed to improve women’s land tenure security in rural Sub-Saharan Africa.

 

Submission deadline: 5pm US Eastern Standard Time on Wednesday, 6 February 2019.

Link: Available here

 

Whom is this opportunity for?

Each successful applicant will meet all four criteria below:

  • Be an NGO, government, donor, or private sector firm.
  • Have a new or existing intervention, which they are planning to roll-out or scale-up; that could help strengthen women’s land tenure security in rural areas in Sub-Saharan Africa; and for which the organization has already secured any necessary funding.
  • Be interested in gaining insights into how and why their intervention is working through a scientifically sound, quantitative impact evaluation.
  • Be interested in strengthening their intervention’s design towards more effectively serving women.

 

About this opportunity

During 2019, GIL plans to launch a new set of impact evaluations on women’s land tenure security in rural areas. GIL has already secured funding to cover GIL staff time and travel, data collection, and data analysis costs associated with three new impact evaluations. This request for expressions of interest (EOIs) is for organizations (“project teams”) who would like to work with the Gender Innovation Lab (GIL) on impact evaluations of their interventions.
The selected project teams will be matched with highly-skilled and experienced GIL and external researchers who will, on a pro bono basis:

  • Work with you to identify the questions your project team would like to answer through impact evaluation; work with you to develop a strong and viable impact evaluation design for your program; and lead an impact evaluation of your project (including design, data collection, and analysis);
  • Provide training for your organization/team on impact evaluations; and
  • Work with you to strengthen your project’s design towards more effectively serving women.

For these impact evaluations, GIL is also prepared to support the costs associated with GIL staff time and travel, data collection, and data analysis.

 

For more information on the EOI selection criteria, application steps, and timeline, please see the Call for Expressions of Interest available here.

 

About the Africa Gender Innovation Lab

The GIL conducts impact evaluations of development interventions in Sub-Saharan Africa to generate evidence on what works and what doesn’t work for closing gender gaps in economic sectors. These evaluations cover projects implemented by the World Bank, governments, aid agencies, private sector firms and nonprofit organizations. With the results of these evaluations, the GIL supports the design of innovative and scalable interventions to address gender inequality across Africa.

Website: GIL

Women’s Land Rights | Malawi: Empowering women to claim and demand their land rights (video)

In partnership with LANDac’s ‘Scaling up women’s land rights in Africa’ action research programme, Oxfam in Malawi partnered with Landnet to build capacity of women smallholder farmers to claim and demand their land rights. The project was implemented in Mzimba, Kasungu and Phalombe district.

This video showcases the impact of the project.

Planetary Security Conference | 19-20 February 2019, The Hague

Climate change affects human security and can increase conflict risk. This issue gained prominence on high level international diplomatic and security policy agendas. Yet still more needs to be done to address risks on the ground. The Planetary Security Initiative (PSI) aims to catalyse action in affected contexts. PSI sets out best practice, strategic entry points and new approaches to reducing climate-related risks to conflict and stability, thus promoting sustainable peace in a changing climate.

The Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs launched the PSI in 2015. Now operated by a consortium of leading think tanks.

Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs

The objectives of the PSI are to:

  • Enhance political involvement in climate-security.
  • Strengthen the knowledge-policy interface by consolidating a global, cross-sectoral and interdisciplinary community of practice.
  • Develop and promote policies and good practice to support governments, the private sector and implementing agencies better securing peace in regions affected by climate change
  • Operate as a permanent platform for international cooperation on planetary security

The Planetary Security Conference is upon invitation only and seats are limited to 300 participants. Registration is on a first come first serve basis and the target  audience consists of senior policy makers and diplomats working on the climate-security interface, as well as representatives from NGOs, research and the private sector. We aim to balance regional representation, gender and sectors (i.e. to bring in diplomacy, defense and development perspectives). For more information, please contact psi@clingendael.org.

https://www.planetarysecurityinitiative.org/conference

 

E&S Special Feature | Transforming Conflicts over Natural Resources in the Global South

The journal Ecology & Society has published a special feature on “Transforming Conflicts over Natural Resources in the Global South for Social-Ecological Resilience”. This special feature is edited by Eleanor Fisher, Maarten Bavinck, and Aklilu Amsalu and contains a number of contributions from researchers in the LANDac network. All articles are open access and can be accessed here:

https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/issues/view.php/feature/131

Enjoy the read!

 

All articles:

Fisher, E., M. Bavinck, and A. Amsalu. 2018. Transforming asymmetrical conflicts over natural resources in the Global South. Ecology and Society 23(4):28.

https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-10386-230428

 

Salman, T., M. de Theije, and I. Vélez-Torres. 2018. Structures, actors, and interactions in the analysis of natural resource conflicts. Ecology and Society 23(3):30.

https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-10221-230330

 

Orta-Martínez, M., L. Pellegrini, and M. Arsel. 2018. “The squeaky wheel gets the grease”? The conflict imperative and the slow fight against environmental injustice in northern Peruvian Amazon. Ecology and Society 23(3):7.

https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-10098-230307

 

Menon, A., M. Sowman, and M. Bavinck. 2018. Rethinking capitalist transformation of fisheries in South Africa and India. Ecology and Society 23(4):27.

https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-10461-230427

 

Tufa, F. A., A. Amsalu, and E. Zoomers. 2018. Failed promises: governance regimes and conflict transformation related to Jatropha cultivation in Ethiopia. Ecology and Society 23(4):26.

https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-10486-230426

 

Hellin, J., B. D. Ratner, R. Meinzen-Dick, and S. Lopez-Ridaura. 2018. Increasing social-ecological resilience within small-scale agriculture in conflict-affected Guatemala. Ecology and Society 23(3):5.

https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-10250-230305

 

Ros-Tonen, M. A. F., and M. Derkyi. 2018. Conflict or cooperation? Social capital as a power resource and conflict mitigation strategy in timber operations in Ghana’s off-reserve forest areas. Ecology and Society 23(3):44.

https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-10408-230344

 

Shrestha, A., D. Roth, and D. Joshi. 2018. Flows of change: dynamic water rights and water access in peri-urban Kathmandu. Ecology and Society 23(2):42.

https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-10085-230242

 

Scholtens, J., and M. Bavinck. 2018. Transforming conflicts from the bottom-up? Reflections on civil society efforts to empower marginalized fishers in postwar Sri Lanka. Ecology and Society 23(3):31.

https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-10216-230331

 

Brandt, F., J. Josefsson, and M. Spierenburg. 2018. Power and politics in stakeholder engagement: farm dweller (in)visibility and conversions to game farming in South Africa. Ecology and Society 23(3):32.

https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-10265-230332

 

Berry, K. A., B. Kalluri, and A. La Vina. 2018. South-to-south exchanges in understanding and addressing natural resource conflicts. Ecology and Society 23(3):33.

https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-10306-230333

 

ITC Twente | Inaugural Lecture Prof. Dr. Richard Sliuzas 22 November 2018

The Rector Magnificus would like to announce that Prof. Dr. Richard Sliuzas, appointed by the Executive Board of the University of Twente as Professor of Urban Planning for Disaster Risk Reduction at the Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation, ITC, will be giving an inaugural lecture in the Prof.ir. M.P. Breedveld Room, Waaier Building, at 16.00hrs on Thursday 22 November 2018 (be present at 15.30) to mark the occasion of his appointment.

INVITATION Inaugural Lecture Prof. Dr. Richard Sliuzas

 

The title of this lecture will be:

GRAPPLING WITH THE CITY – DISASTER NEXUS

The Rector Magnificus kindly invites you to attend this event. Before the inaugural lecture coffee and tea will be served in the lobby of the Waaier building. You may offer your congratulations after the lecture.

REGISTRATION
Would you like to attend the ceremony? Register before 22 November 2018 on utwente.nl/inaugurallectures

LANDac | Seminar Climate Displacement

The impacts of climate change increasingly forces people away from their homes and livelihoods. Increased droughts force small-scale farmers to abandon their land and the rising sea level pushes poor families living in delta cities away from their homes. LANDac and Displacement Solutions invites you to a seminar on this phenomenon, also known as climate displacement. This seminar starts with a brief discussion of climate displacement: What is climate displacement? How does it materialize in different settings? We then turn to a discussion of climate displacement within the current development agenda: The growing global problem of climate displacement has yet to receive the political and legal attention it deserves, particularly given the mass scale that this form of displacement will take. One approach to the issue of climate displacement focuses on how best to both prevent it, and when prevention fails, what to concretely do to assist climate displaced persons. This seminar will explore the particular land dimensions of climate displacement and how and where land fits into the list of policy options designed to best protect the rights of those affected. In particular, the meeting will explore issues such as:

  • The One House, One Family at a time project in Bangladesh, coordinated by Displacement Solutions and YPSA, as an example of a concrete solution which is currently offered to address the issue. Can this approach be replicated and scaled up elsewhere?
  • Are there land-based solutions to climate displacement which are already underway and what are the experiences (e.g. national climate land banks)?
  • How to more strongly involve governments, other donors as well as practitioners in finding concrete solutions to climate displacement on the ground?

Now available: Climate displacement seminar report

PROGRAMME

15.00 – 15.10

Welcome and introduction by LANDac, Prof. Dr. Annelies Zoomers

15.10 – 15.45

Land dimensions of Climate Displacement, Dr. Scott Leckie – Director of Displacement Solutions

15.45 – 16.15

Responses from research, policy and practice (names to be announced)

16.15 – 17.00

Discussion with the audience: experiences with climate displacement and ideas for taking this agenda forward

PLEASE REGISTER FOR THIS EVENT BY SENDING AN EMAIL TO: g.betsema@uu.nl.

 

SPEAKERS

Scott Leckie

Scott Leckie is the director and founder of Displacement Solutions, an organisation dedicated to resolving cases of forced displacement throughout the world, in particular displacement caused by climate change and conflict. Over the past three decades he has established several human rights organisations and institutions and regularly advises a number of UN agencies on housing, land and property rights issues. Scott has published 19 books and over 200 articles and reports on climate displacement and related topics. He lectures frequently and teaches several human rights courses.

Different speakers from research, policy and practice on land governance and climate displacements will provide reflections on Scott’s presentation. Names to be announced soon.

Location: Academy Building, Westerdijkkamer, Domplein 29, Utrecht

Day & time: Thursday 4 October, 15.00 – 17.00 hrs (coffee from 14.45)

LANDac | Annual International Conference Report 2018

The LANDac Annual International Conference 2018 looked at land governance through the lens of mobility. Land acquisitions trigger migration and yield other types of mobility such as capital, goods and ideas. Ensuing land claims raise new questions for land governance. So far, the discussion has focused on respecting land rights, informing local residents and offering fair compensation. The conference explored the question: Given the variety of mobility, what are good ways forward in land governance?

The report is an impression of the LANDac Conference 2018. It provides a summary of six plenary keynotes, the presentations and key insights from 32 parallel sessions, and the debates following from the plenary reflection panels.

LANDac | Call for papers: LANDac Special Issue in Land

 

Dear Colleagues,

We invite you to submit your paper for open access publication in this Special Issue of Land, “Land Governance and (Im)mobility: Exploring the Nexus between Land Acquisition, Displacement and Migration”. This Special Issue takes the land–mobility nexus as a starting point and focuses on the multiple ways in which access and rights to land relate to mobility processes.

This Special Issue emerges from contributions of the LANDac Annual International Conference that takes place 28–29 June, 2018, in Utrecht, the Netherlands. You are invited to submit an abstract by 15 September 2018 and full-paper manuscripts by 15 January 2019 to Land. Contributions may address the Special Issue topic from different angles and focus on:

  • Infrastructure development and involuntary settlement
  • Land reforms and conflict-induced displacement
  • Gender differentials, specifically women’s and youth’s role in migration and resettlement processes
  • Strategies of inclusive governance and inclusive business in the context of displacement induced migration (including, but also going beyond fair compensation, informed consent)
  • The role of digital and data technologies in monitoring and governing displacement induced mobility.

Prof. Dr. Annelies Zoomers
Dr. Marthe Derkzen
Dr. Christine Richter
Guest Editors

Download the Land special issue flyer – Land Governance and (Im)mobility

For more information and submission guidelines please check the Special Issue website: http://www.mdpi.com/journal/land/special_issues/LANDac 

LANDac | LANDac Conference side event – Workshop: (Geo)Visualizing Qualitative Methods

Workshop: (Geo)Visualizing Qualitative Methods

Organised by Dr. Kei Otsuki and Dr. Ajay Bailey 

Our academic research often produces texts. We interview people, observe situations, collect more data, analyze and write and publish about them. The question is: are they effective in conveying our messages? How can we engage ourselves and the ‘people’ whom we study, using different methods to enrich and democratize our research process and outcomes? The visual turn in social sciences brings to question the politics of visibility/invisibility as well as issues of privacy. Who are we framing and in whose frame are we standing?

This workshop is organized for researchers who are interested in using different methods – essentially ‘visualization’ methods using digital media, including photos, videos, drones, and GIS in combination with historical, geographical and ethnographic descriptions of specific places and people. Drawing on our own research contexts, we aim to share our own experiences and areas for further development and collaboration. We encourage participants to reflect on: What methods inspires them? What do they find challenging about methods? In what context would you like to apply (new) methods?

 

Date & Time: Wednesday, 27 June, 13.30-17.00

Location: Vening Meinesz building room 1.02, Princetonlaan 8a, Utrecht 

To confirm participation please fill the form:  https://goo.gl/forms/RFoFtuGqiKATLtdb2