Theme: Connection, inclusion, innovation and capacity to improve land governance
GLTN was represented in the just concluded
India Land and Development Conference - ILDC 2018, held in New Delhi, India from 19 to 21 February 2018. The conference was organized by
NR Management Consultants (NRMC), a technical and managerial advisory firm in the development sector in India working to provide evidence-based solutions to bridge information gaps, create evidence and build platforms for connection and conversations among land-stakeholders.
In his opening remarks, the co-founder and senior advisor at Landesa Mr. Tim Hanstad, emphasized on the improvement of land tenure for urban and rural households to transform the lives of vulnerable communities. He went on to cite several topics that should form the basis of these engagements that included providing access to land for the absolute landless, regularizing informal occupation, improving land records, reducing farmland rental restrictions to accelerate tenure delivery, simplifying and harmonizing land registration to ensure land records are up-to-date, increasing awareness to legal land related services, closing the land-related data gap and strengthening of women land rights.
The conference sessions that included masterclasses and facilitated sessions led by local and international organizations such as
Landesa,
Land Portal, Land Alliance, Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies, local universities and other institutions in India. GLTN organized a master classon the
Social Tenure Domain Model, a pro-poor, gender responsive, participatory and affordable land information management system for capturing people's land relationships along the
Continuum of Land Rights. Many organizations expressed interest to learn about the STDM tool and process while others were keen on piloting it in their various projects.
Majority of the presentations during the three-day workshop focused on efforts around homegrown innovative and technological solutions that are creating a difference in India land sector. Thirty-five organizations were represented in the various sessions of the workshop and GLTN took the opportunity to network with these institutions while also informing on the various land tools available at the network and which offer a practical way to solve the many problems in land administration and management.