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The Challenges of Multi-Level and Multi-Stakeholder Land Tenure Projects - The case of Burundi Paper presented at the Land and Poverty conference of the.

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Presentation on theme: "The Challenges of Multi-Level and Multi-Stakeholder Land Tenure Projects - The case of Burundi Paper presented at the Land and Poverty conference of the."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Challenges of Multi-Level and Multi-Stakeholder Land Tenure Projects - The case of Burundi
Paper presented at the Land and Poverty conference of the World Bank, Washington DC, 2018 David Betge, Jean Pierre Irutingabo, Andrew Lippett

2 Context of the Burundi land tenure work
People returning after decades, displaced by ethnically driven conflict. Conflicts between residents and returnees. Overall, minimal registration of tenure rights. Government introduced new land law: Code Fonciere 2011. Source: Wikipedia

3 Land tenure pilot programs in BDI
Overall objectives: Regularization of land rights  National land tenure Database. Resolving land conflicts related to refugee return Number of pilots in the past, inter alia by Swiss Development Cooperation. Source: nationsonline.com

4 Land Tenure Registration, ZOA
ZOA: Providing Relief to people affected by conflict or natural disasters – contributing to a perspective of Hope in which people work together for their futures – working with communities on the Recovery of their livelihoods. 15 program countries. Addressing Livelihoods, Basic Education, WASH, Disaster Response, Peacebuilding  Land Rights.

5 Land Tenure Registration, ZOA
ZOA works with land rights/tenure programs in Uganda, DR Congo and Burundi  Makamba Province (southernmost province)  Initially two communes.

6 Land Tenure Registration, ZOA
Source: nationsonline.com

7 Land Tenure Registration, ZOA
Objectives: Conflict resolution. Land certification  regularization of rights. Increased: tenure security, social cohesion, investments in agriculture.

8 Land tenure registration – ZOA ctd.
Clustered (systematic) registration approach. Communal Land Services set up (government body). Communal Recognition Committees established and trained  Mediation of conflicts and afterwards demarcation. Resolution of conflicts and protection of women’s rights. Source: Author

9 Land tenure registration – ZOA ctd.
Source: Author Using Kobo collect and Handheld GPS Devices Data fed into ArcGIS Creating maps of plots, registering ownership and usage rights.

10 Challenges Secondary land rights of women have been endangered/lost during certification process.  new pilot found solutions using democratic dialogue. Notification of authorities on mutations. Addressing the need for increased capacities among state authorities on all levels. Setting up of national spatial data infrastructure (storage, dissemination). Integration of tenure registration program with agricultrual development.

11 Conclusion Comprehensive nationwide approach is still lacking.
Only 9 communes with systematic approach to LTR. No coherence in donor engagement. Insufficient coordination and cooperation between stakeholders – donors, implementers, state actors.

12 THANK YOU!


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