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Impacts of Formalizing Customary Land Rights in Burkina Faso: Preliminary Findings From MCC Rural Land Governance Project 2015 World Bank Conference on.

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Presentation on theme: "Impacts of Formalizing Customary Land Rights in Burkina Faso: Preliminary Findings From MCC Rural Land Governance Project 2015 World Bank Conference on."— Presentation transcript:

1 Impacts of Formalizing Customary Land Rights in Burkina Faso: Preliminary Findings From MCC Rural Land Governance Project 2015 World Bank Conference on Land And Poverty March 25, 2015 Ye Zhang Sara Borelli and Teerachat Techapaisarnjaroenkij IMPAQ International, LLC

2 Road Map  MCC RLG Project Overview and Activities  Evaluation Design and Analytical Methods  Data  Preliminary Empirical Results  Conclusions 2

3  The Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) signed a $480.9 million 5 years compact with the Government of Burkina Faso in 2008.  MCC Compact funds the following four projects  Rural Land Governance Project (RLG);  Agriculture Development Project (ADP);  Roads Project; and  Burkinabé Response to Improve Girls' Chances to Succeed Schools Project (BRIGHT 2) MCC RLG Project Overview 3

4 …project overview 4  The Rural Land Governance Project (RLG) was designed to increase investment in land and rural productivity through improved land tenure security and land management.  RLG phased approach:  Phase I (pilot): 17 communes  Phase II (extension): 30 communes

5 5 MCC RLG Project Activities (1) Legal and procedural change and communication  Rural Land Law and revisions of the Agrarian and Land Reorganization legislation (RAF), support for other legal reforms;  participatory stakeholder processes and validation;  communications and outreach tools; (2) Institutional development and capacity building  Strengthen land registration and mapping services;  decentralization of land tenure services, including establishing new commune- level rural land services offices (SFRs) and construction of 47 municipal buildings to provide offices for the decentralized municipal land services;  capacity building to mediate in land conflicts (training of judges, lawyers, law school curriculum modules, and establishing Village Conciliation Commission);

6 6 …project activities (3) Site-specific land tenure interventions  participatory land use management planning: training, mapping, operational costs, and the necessary assistance by regional and provincial institutions; and  preparation of rural land possession certificates (Attestation de Propriété Foncière Rurale -APFRs ) for non-irrigated land in the Project’s 47 implementation communes from 2013-2014;  preparation of land titles and leases for recipients of farmland in the new Di Irrigation Perimeter in 2014;  preparation of leases for users of land in existing irrigation perimeters near the Di Perimeter in 2014;  provision of APFR-like certificates to households in Ganzourgou Province in 2010;

7 7 MCC RLG Project Logic Model

8 8 Evaluation Research Questions What are the effects of the interventions on:  Perception of land tenure security?  Number of land conflicts?  Producer’s investment decisions?  Agricultural productivity and revenues?

9 Impacts are measured using a non-experimental design :  Treatment Group: households located in the 17 project communes: Communes were grouped in 15 clusters to facilitate the coordination of MCA-BF programs; Commune is near or within the agricultural development areas (zones d’aménagements-ZAs) of MCA-BF program or near another irrigation perimeters; Commune has important land tenure issues;  Comparison group: households located in 17 communes not subject to the intervention (comparison communes) (Selection of comparison areas was based on a combination of objective criteria and local knowledge of MCA-BF: similarity of population, being in the same province; importance of land conflicts, and similarity in land administration systems) 9 Impact Evaluation of Phase I RLG Project

10  Difference-in-Differences (DID) compare before-after changes in outcomes of households in the treatment group and households in comparison group. 10 Evaluation Design

11  MCA–BF contracted with IDEA Consult International in collaboration with Bureau d’Etude et de la Recherche pour le Developpment (BERD) to collect data on households living in the intervention and comparison communes.  Baseline data on approximately 3,500 households have been collected in 34 Phase I communes early 2010.  Follow-up data on the same households have been collected early 2012; Since the Phase I follow-up survey took place only 2 years after the baseline, when many activities had not yet been implemented, the DID analysis based on the baseline and follow-up survey will only capture Activity 1 and initial Activity 2 effects. 11 Data

12 12 Survey Instruments  The survey instruments were composed of four separate modules  Household;  Individual;  Parcel;  Agricultural Revenues;  Questionnaires collect information about: background characteristics of the household and its members; individual perception of land security; incidence of land conflicts and investments in land; agricultural production and revenues;

13 13 DID Regression Model

14  Individuals’ perceptions of land tenure security are measured by respondents’ opinions about whether some land-related scenarios represent potential land conflict problems E.g. respondents asked whether they are concerned about the arrival of new people into the village to exploit land  Concern over the influx of newcomers to exploit land decreased by 7.4 percentage points between baseline and follow-up among treatment group individuals relative to comparison group 14 Summary of Results: Impacts on Perception of Land Security

15  Land security concerns over previous villagers’ claims on land: decline of 6.7 percentage points No statistically significant impacts for other land security perception outcomes (like concerns about inheritance disputes among villagers or concerns over damages caused by animals)  We observed a general improvement in land tenure security perceptions in both treatment and comparison areas for several perception measures. This result may indicate the effectiveness of national and regional RLG activities.  Results were similar for male and female respondents. 15 Summary of Results: Impacts on Perception of Land Security

16  Specific actions intended to measure farmers’ authority over their own land (e.g. ability to rent, sell, plant trees): we did not find consistent patterns, nor statistically significant impacts;  Investments on the land: we did not find empirical evidence that individuals changed their investment activities on land;  Incidence of user rights on the parcel: no evidence of impact on user right status in the whole sample; positive and significant impact on female user right status findings might be consistent with delays in Activity 3 implementation activities (i.e. land certificates) and only partial implementation of Activity 2 during the short time span between baseline and follow-up data collections 16 Summary of Results: Impacts on Capacity of Action on Land

17  No statistically significant impact on incidence of land conflicts measured at the parcel level, nature of conflict (i.e. whether with villagers or household members) nor conflict resolution mechanisms.  We do find 2 to 3 percentage point decrease in the fraction of parcels that experienced land conflicts between 2010 and 2012 in both treatment and comparison areas;  No statistically significant impact on farmers’ confidence in various institutions of land conflict resolution (like land chiefs, village commissions);  No differential impacts between men and women  Findings might be consistent with rollout of the national and non-site-specific interventions of the RLG Project and the delays in site-specific intervention implementation; 17 Summary of Results: Impacts on Land Conflicts and Conflict Resolution

18  Data Limitation prevented to analyze impacts on agricultural production;  No statistically significant impact on agricultural revenues across major crops except for: the proportion of male farmers who sold part or all of the millet production significantly increased by 6 percentage points; statistically significant increase in female farmers’ niébé revenues levels ;  Null results for other crops: given the short time span between baseline and follow-up, it is challenging to detect the changes in agricultural production and/or revenues with precision 18 Summary of Results: Impacts on Agricultural Revenues

19  The findings from the evaluation of early implementation of the RLG Project suggest some encouraging interim results especially for non-site-specific activities and outcomes that are more likely to change in the short run (e.g., perception of land security).  Subgroup analysis indicated very similar results for both men and women.  Lack of statistically significant results for several outcomes might be related to the short time span between baseline and follow-up data collection and delays in site specific implementation activities.  Longer term outcome could be better assessed with an additional survey conducted approximately 2 years after all activities had been fully rolled out. 19 Summary and Conclusions

20 20 Thank you


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