Land, Conflict and Sustainable Development

Originally appeared on Medium.

When I arrived in Liberia six years ago, I was tasked with facilitating the development of the country’s first national land policy. Of the many reasons why such a policy was needed — improving the enabling environment for economic growth; advancing better land and resource management in a country rich in natural resources — none was more striking than the prevalence of land disputes. Virtually every single Liberian has been touched in some way by a land dispute. Although disputes over land and natural resources played an important role in the 14-year civil war that ended in 2003, today the majority of land disputes do not grab headlines. But they are nevertheless a source of real anxiety and insecurity. No one can be sure that their land is free of disputes without clear laws governing who can own what land and under what conditions. And clear laws and policies need to be complemented by an accurate and up-to-date land information system that can tell you with a reasonable degree of certainty who owns what pieces of land and where the boundaries are.

According to a 2008 survey, 59 percent of Liberians said that violent land conflicts arise ‘often’ or ‘always.’ And 62 percent said that land was the most important cause of violent conflict between communities. This is confirmed by 2013–2014 baseline data from USAID’s impact evaluation of a program to strengthen community land governance. That data showed that almost every community surveyed described an ongoing, protracted land dispute.

Read the full photo essay on Medium.

The Thief – A Hip Hop song by Colombian youth about their experiences with conflict and displacement

This song was produced during a USAID and Ayara Foundation youth empowerment and outreach activity called “Tu Tierra, Mi Tierra, Nuestro Territorio.” The activity fostered ethnic pride; taught youth in conflict-affected areas of Colombia about land rights, collective territories, and land restitution; and empowered them to express themselves peacefully through hip-hop. The adolescents co-wrote and produced music about their experiences with conflict, displacement, and violence and their hopes for peace and reconciliation in their communities. These activities cultivated a cohort of 75 young leaders who will now disseminate land-rights concepts and advocate on behalf of their communities.

For more videos from USAID’s Land and Rural Development Program, visit their YouTube channel.

We want – A Hip Hop song by Colombian youth about their experiences with conflict and displacement

This song was produced during a USAID and Ayara Foundation youth empowerment and outreach activity called “Tu Tierra, Mi Tierra, Nuestro Territorio.” The activity fostered ethnic pride; taught youth in conflict-affected areas of Colombia about land rights, collective territories, and land restitution; and empowered them to express themselves peacefully through hip-hop. The adolescents co-wrote and produced music about their experiences with conflict, displacement, and violence and their hopes for peace and reconciliation in their communities. These activities cultivated a cohort of 75 young leaders who will now disseminate land-rights concepts and advocate on behalf of their communities.

For more videos from USAID’s Land and Rural Development Program, visit their YouTube channel.

Beautiful Land – A song by Colombian youth about their experiences with conflict and displacement

This song was produced during a USAID and Ayara Foundation youth empowerment and outreach activity called “Tu Tierra, Mi Tierra, Nuestro Territorio. (Your land. My land. Our territory.)” The activity fostered ethnic pride; taught youth in conflict-affected areas of Colombia about land rights, collective territories, and land restitution; and empowered them to express themselves peacefully through hip-hop. The adolescents co-wrote and produced music about their experiences with conflict, displacement, and violence and their hopes for peace and reconciliation in their communities. These activities cultivated a cohort of 75 young leaders who will now disseminate land-rights concepts and advocate on behalf of their communities.

For more videos from USAID’s Land and Rural Development Program, visit their YouTube channel.

Webinar Wednesday: Land Tenure in Tanzania

Join USAID LandLinks, the Global Donor Working Group on Land, and the FAO for an online event exploring land tenure and property rights in Tanzania. This webinar will be presented by the primary author of USAID’s updated Tanzania Land Tenure Country Profile, Dr. Maureen Moriarty-Lempke. Stay tuned following the Tanzania discussion for a 15-minute overview of the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries, and Forests in the Context of National Food Security (VGGT), presented by The Cloudburst Group’s Karol Boudreaux.

Check out USAID’s updated Tanzania Land Tenure Country Profile and the Global Donor Working Group on Land’s one-pager on Land Governance in Tanzania.

Join the discussion live on Tuesday, February 28 at 8 am EST (4 pm East Africa Time Zone), submit question or comment using the form below and connect on Twitter using the hashtag #countrybycountry as well.

Land Matters Media Scan – 2 December 2016

Here are the recent land tenure and resource management media items:

USAID

  1. Harvesting Sweet Success: How Land Rights are Helping Tajikistan’s Apricot Farmers Reap the Fruits of their Labor (11/28/16)
    Source: Medium / USAIDEnviro
  2. From the Ground Up: USAID brings together farmers, communities, and the government of Burma … (11/18/16)
    Source: Medium / USAIDEnviro

Events

  1. Land Tenure and Property Rights MOOC 2.0 (Registration Open)
    Source: USAID LandLinks
  2. Webinar Wednesday: Land Tenure in Tanzania (12/7/16)
    Source: USAID LandLinks
  3. Artisanal Mining, Property Rights, and Development (12/13/16)
    Source: USAID LandLinks
  4. Online Debate on Land Valuation and Fair Compensation (11/28-12/16/16)
    Source: Land Portal

Global

  1. Land rights; a source of economic stability, security for women living with HIV (12/1/16)
    Source: MyJoyOnline
  2. Renewable energy is violating human rights as much as fossil fuels have for decades (11/25/16)
    Source: Quartz
  3. Getting to Sustainable Palm Oil: A Hardware and Software Approach to a Market Problem (11/23/16)
    Source: New Security Beat blog

Africa

  1. Africa: Pastoralists’ Complex Tenure Rights Are Key to Community Resilience (11/25/16)
    Source: AllAfrica / FAO
  2. DRC Launches DFID-Funded Land Governance Programme to support peace and stability (11/23/16)
    Source: ReliefWeb / UN-Habitat
  3. Nigeria: Parliament Condemns Land Grab By Chinese Firms (11/29/16)
    Source: AllAfrica / Premium Times
  4. Tanzania: Making National Land Policy Inclusive and People-Centred [sic] (11/29/16)
    Source: AllAfrica / The Citizen
  5. Kenyans sound alarm over election threat to public land (11/29/16)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  6. Kenya: Legal access to land rights does little to better plight of female Kenyan farmers (11/22/16)
    Source: New York Times
  7. Uganda: Customary Land Titles to End Conflicts – Officials (11/23/16)
    Source: AllAfrica / The Monitor

Americas

  1. Land Distribution Most Unequal in Latin America, Charity Says (11/30/16)
    Source: Voice of America / Reuters
  2. Bolivia: Rights Campaigners: Mining Projects, Big Plantations Mean Bolivia’s Drought Hurts More (11/28/16)
    Source: Voice of America / Reuters

Asia

  1. ‘Leopard skin’ plan helps Cambodia farmers stay on large land concessions (11/29/16)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  2. Related: TIMELINE-Land politics in Cambodia (11/29/16)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  3. China steps up protection of property rights (11/27/16)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation

Pacific

  1. Guam Land Could Go to Traditional Chamorro Healers (11/29/16)
    Source: Voice of America
  2. Malaysian DJ samples indigenous music to spread land rights message (11/28/16)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation

My territory – A song by Colombian youth about their experiences with conflict and displacement

This song was produced during a USAID and Ayara Foundation youth empowerment and outreach activity called “Tu Tierra, Mi Tierra, Nuestro Territorio.” The activity fostered ethnic pride; taught youth in conflict-affected areas of Colombia about land rights, collective territories, and land restitution; and empowered them to express themselves peacefully through hip-hop. The adolescents co-wrote and produced music about their experiences with conflict, displacement, and violence and their hopes for peace and reconciliation in their communities. These activities cultivated a cohort of 75 young leaders who will now disseminate land-rights concepts and advocate on behalf of their communities.

For more videos from USAID’s Land and Rural Development Program, visit their YouTube channel.

Land Matters Media Scan – 16 November 2016

Here are the most recent land tenure and resource management media items:

Reports and Publications

  1. Liberia: Sinoeans Confirm Global Witness Land Grab Report on GVL (11/15/16)
    Source: FrontPageAfrica
    Related report: Temples and Guns

Africa

  1. Kenyans tell leaders of frustration over delays tackling land corruption (11/14/16)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  2. Kenya: Government to Revoke All Title Deeds of Irregularly Acquired Land (11/14/16)
    Source: AllAfrica / Press Release
  3. Uganda: Beneath the surface of Uganda’s ‘exemplary’ refugee settlement, tensions simmer (11/15/16)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  4. I.Coast: Land disputes ensue in western cocoa belt (11/10/16)
    Source: Africanews / AFP

Americas

  1. Colombia: Giving Peace a Second Chance in Colombia (11/14/16)
    Source: The Nation

Asia

  1. India: Conflicts over land in India stall projects worth billions of dollars – report (11/16/16)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  2. India: Villagers in Goa fight to keep ancient community land from university (11/16/16)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation

Land Matters Media Scan – 11 November 2016

Here are the recent land tenure and resource management media items:

Upcoming Events

  1. IIED webinar: Using community by-laws to secure customary land rights in Kenya (11/16/16)
    Source: IIED
  2. Webinar on the Land Portal’s New Thematic Portfolios (11/17/16)
    Source: The Land Portal

COP22 / Climate Change

  1. Who owns this land? A question that matters for climate change and COP22 (11/10/16)
    Source: Devex
  2. Indigenous land rights: A cheap and effective climate change solution, just in time (11/4/16)
    Source: Ford Foundation blog
  3. Amazonians call on leaders to heed link between land rights and climate change (11/4/16)
    Source: The Guardian

Reports / Publications

  1. FINAL DRAFT: Tenure Responsive LUP – A Guide for Country Level Implementation (11/9/16)
    Source: GLTN

Global

  1. Video: Land and Urban Development Challenges in the Social and Economic Development of the Global South (11/6/16)
    Source: Land and Property Network / YouTube
  2. Indigenous peoples given interactive map to help secure land rights (11/10/16)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  3. Photo Essay: Run the World – Six countries’ efforts to drive adaptation action through gender equality in leadership and equitable control over resources (11/4/16)
    Source: UNDP / Exposure

Africa

  1. Mali: Rainfall, grazing, families and land in Dlonguebougou (11/9/16)
    Source: IIED
  2. Zimbabwe: EU Worried By Fresh Wave of Land Seizures (11/10/16)
    Source: Financial Gazette / AllAfrica

Americas

  1. How Colombia’s Failed Peace Treaty Could Wreak Havoc on Its Diversity-Rich Ecosystems (11/4/16)
    Source: Smithsonian Magazine
  2. Mexico: U.N. Supports Indigenous Land Rights in Mexico’s Mining Plans (11/10/16)
    Source: The Costa Rica Star

Asia

  1. Cambodia: Domestic violence rife amid Cambodia land conflicts – rights group (11/10/16)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation

Pacific

  1. Malaysia: Kelantan Forestry Department issues ultimatum to orang asli activists (11/11/16)
    Source: The Star Online
  2. Palm oil’s green body comes under fire from activists (11/7/16)
    Source: Reuters

Two and a Half Years After the Diamond Ban Lift, Glimmers of Hope in Cote d’Ivoire

Originally appeared on Medium.

April 2014.

The United Nations Security Council had just voted unanimously to lift a ban on importing rough diamonds from Côte d’Ivoire. The ban had been put in place in 2005, after the UN found that rebels were using diamonds to fund arms purchases during its civil war, which had begun in 2002.

For the first time in nearly a decade, diamond exports, which once supplied jobs for tens of thousands of workers in this West African country, once again became legal. But, after nine years out of the (legal) diamond game, Côte d’Ivoire had to completely rebuild its diamond industry.

In the intervening years before the ban was lifted, diamond buying houses had become defunct, the national mining company left the area, and legitimate financiers packed up and left. Mining had continued, but in secret: artisanal miners had dug in the night, selling at bargain basement prices to illicit buyers, who in turn smuggled the rough diamonds out of the country. Despite the ban, the UN estimates that Côte d’Ivoire extracted a minimum of 50,000 carats per year, and that the diamond industry employed at least 200,000 Ivoirians.

Now, the euphoria of lifting the ban was wearing off, and Ivoirians were grappling with the realities of how to actually re-enter the legal diamond trade.

Fast forward two and a half years, and it appears that progress has been slow, but steady. In 2015 — the year after the ban was lifted — Cote d’Ivoire legally exported 14,000 carats. This year, it has already surpassed 20,000 carats.

Read the full photo essay on Medium.