An Overview of Frontier Technologies for Land Tenure: How to Avoid the Hype and Focus on What Matters
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Achieve positive long-term impact for small-scale producers (e.g., by setting incentives to improve agricultural practices);
- Mitigate risks (e.g., exclusion of vulnerable groups, including women, increased inequality through elite capture, involuntary land expropriation, various types of conflict between communities, individuals, and land grab by companies).
2. Definitions
- “the terms and conditions on which land is held, used and transacted” [10], or
- “the relationship, whether legally or customarily defined, among people, as individuals or groups, with respect to land” [11], or
- “the rules, authorities, institutions, rights, and norms that govern access to and control over land and related resources… It governs who can use what resources, for how long, and under what conditions” [12].
- Land rights are defined as the rights held by people or communities over land, including rights of access, occupation, and resource use, as well as the right to transfer those rights to others and exclude others from exercising those rights over the land in question.
- Land tenure refers to the way in which land rights are held and recognized (whether through written policies and laws or unwritten customs and practices), including the associated terms and conditions.
- Duration—how long different land rights last.
- Protection—whether land rights are upheld when challenged.
- Robustness—whether land rights-holders can use and dispose of their land rights without interference.
- Land rights are socially embedded, overlapping, and nested. They mirror the social and cultural values of the community and gain legitimacy from the trust a community places in the institutions governing the system.
- Rights are derived from accepted membership of a social unit (kinship ties) either through birth or acquired allegiance.
- They allow multiple uses (e.g., farming, fishing, occupation) and users (e.g., farmers, migrants, herders, residents) of resources.
- Rights are both individual (the holding) and communal (the commons).
- They are dynamic and evolve in response to external or internal change. Boundaries are flexible and negotiable.
- The livelihoods of over a third of the world’s population depend on small-scale agriculture;
- Small-scale farmers produce a significant proportion of food consumed in developing countries;
- Many small-scale farmers live close to or below the poverty line, and most aspire for a better future for their children.
- They can address large-scale economic, social, or political opportunities or problems;
- They are characterized by rapid technological development;
- They have the potential for broad impact across diverse fields;
- They have the potential for displacing existing technologies and bypassing expected technological pathways;
- They involve considerable uncertainty, largely due to their adoption outstripping regulators’ and policymakers’ ability to set standards for their use [31].
- Digitization is the creation of a digital copy of an analog or physical object or attribute, i.e., converting something that is not digital into a digital representation or artifact.
- Digitalization cannot occur without digitization. It is the use of digitized information to improve business processes. Examples include collaborating on documents shared online. This increases productivity and reduces costs by enhancing access to digital data and processes.
- Digital transformation involves an organizational change to leverage the opportunities made possible by digitization and digitalization. It requires a rethink of the way things have been conducted in the past, taking advantage of the possibilities afforded by new technologies to radically increase productivity and creativity.
3. Materials and Methods
- International organizations included groups such as the International Federation of Surveyors (FIG), FAO, World Bank, USAID, and Ordnance Survey International.
- Solutions providers are companies/organizations that offer a tool or platform for land administration/land rights recording. We interviewed representatives from Cadasta, Meridia, Medici Land Governance, and Terra Firma.
- Academics were interviewed from the Universities of Twente (Netherlands), Münster (Germany), Zagreb (Croatia), and Swinburne (Australia).
- Understanding interviewees’ interest and involvement in land tenure projects;
- Their experiences with frontier technologies;
- Their biggest challenges and successes;
- Where they see the future for land rights mapping.
4. Results
4.1. Identifying What Really Matters
“Before talking about any large-scale land tenure project, countries in Africa need to have policies in place. Then that land policy needs to go hand in hand with policies allowing the use of tech. Tech is not a solution, it is an enabler. It enables people to do well what they intend to do. But if there is no intention/political will, tech doesn’t mean anything. You will get frustrated with good gadgets and applications, but at the end you can’t produce a result because the law won’t support it or there will be too much red tape to get a result.”
- Political will: Land is a sensitive topic, especially in post-colonial contexts. Political support is identified as a crucial enabler for success.
- Legal and policy frameworks: A sound, supportive, and enabling land policy is necessary but not sufficient for success. The legal and political framework must extend to the use of information and communication technology (ICT) as well.
- Acceptance and adoption: Land administration professionals can be slow to accept and adopt new technologies and procedures. Lack of capacity may hinder technological uptake.
- Customary land: For tenure security on customary land, projects should adapt to customary norms. This means getting buy-in from the chiefs as well as the land rights-holders.
4.1.1. Legal and Political Environment
4.1.2. Acceptance and Adoption
“As much as we want to run towards the frontier technologies and be at the cutting edge and the start of the diffusion curve, the reality is most of us, and most agencies, are still some way back behind the cutting edge. Diffusion doesn’t happen at the flick of a switch. It’s a process that takes any organization a long time.”
4.1.3. Mapping Customary Land Rights
“… to support both the legibility of customary land tenure to government authorities and the preservation of the customs within which tenure relations operate. Preserving customary rights to land requires also preserving customary ways of allotting, negotiating, and exercising those rights. Otherwise, the entire notion of customary land tenure itself becomes a shell or a cover for replacing customary tenure with statutory tenure.”[44]
“We have to tread very carefully so that we don’t also have problems with the norms in the community. You can’t impose a new normal on the community with your titling, because that will break the community norms and create a new problem that wasn’t there.”
“I’ve seen too many projects led by Western consultants go completely wrong because people are dropping in with no context, no knowledge, trampling over the existing systems and imposing their approach, and it’s either rejected outright or as soon as they leave, everyone goes back to doing what they had been doing before. I’m a big believer in locally led solutions. And it takes more time, sure, up front, but it definitely pays off.”
4.2. Avoiding the Hype
“In some cases, organizations want to apply the latest, new technology to solve a problem that doesn’t really exist, that could be solved more easily. I really advocate for looking at the problem and needs of a land tenure situation first, and then checking out which technology could help to solve this problem and can this technology be maintained in a country context.”
“Beware the hype surrounding what is promised vs. what is actually delivered. There must be the institutional and technological foundation to support the tech. Make sure you listen to the right advice from the right people–people who know what they’re talking about and aren’t just pushing a product.”
- Blockchain does not improve the data. If the data in the land administration system are incorrect, applying blockchain will not correct the data; it will simply secure the incorrect data into the blockchain.
- Blockchain does not offer anything that a classical, centralized, relational database would not be able to offer to land administration. “You can achieve the goals to have the good land administration system without blockchain, using the existing technologies for data management and information systems”.
- Land administration, and particularly land registration, deals with spatial objects (the land parcel), whereas blockchain does not deal with spatial information.
- One of the advantages of blockchain is its immutability, yet land registration data are very dynamic.
- Land administration is, in most jurisdictions, a state-sanctioned activity. Blockchain challenges the sovereignty of land registry data by taking it out of the public domain.
“We always start with the needs and adapt the suggestions and solutions to the country needs, the country requirements. There is really no one solution working for everybody. Establishing needs requires a dedicated team of consultants working in country. We also need to assess technical readiness and openness to new approaches.”
5. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
What has been your involvement in land tenure/land rights-related projects? |
Where does your interest in this line of work/research come from, and how long have you been doing it? |
What is your understanding of ‘Frontier Technologies’? |
Please describe your experience of using any of these, or similar, technologies for mapping land rights? |
What have been the biggest challenges you have encountered in this regard? |
What have been the biggest successes you have experienced in this regard? |
What are the challenges and risks associated with land tenure security projects? |
Based on your experiences, what advice would you give to an organization embarking on a land rights mapping/land tenure security project? |
Who do you think are the leaders/innovators in this field? |
In your opinion, where do you see the future for land rights mapping? |
Name | Organization |
---|---|
Anthony Beck | Ordnance Survey |
Keith Bell | Independent consultant |
Rohan Bennett | FIG/Swinburne University of Technology |
Mykhailo Cheremshynskyi | Independent consultant |
Amy Coughenour-Betancourt | Cadasta |
Vladimir Evtimov | FAO |
Zdravko Galić | University of Zagreb |
Mila Koeva | ITC (University of Twente) |
JP Molina | Cadasta |
Simon Norfolk | TerraFirma |
Yuliya Panfil | New American |
Maria Paola Rizzo | FAO |
Didier Sagashaya | Medici Land Governance |
Claudia Stöcker | SmartLandMaps/University of Münster |
Olivier Vernin | Meridia |
1 | Goal 1: end poverty in all its forms everywhere; Goal 2: End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture; Goal 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls; Goal 11: Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable; Goal 15: Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss. (www.sdgs.un.org accessed on 27 October 2022) |
2 | This paper is part of a larger FAO and IFAD project investigating frontier technologies for tenure—publication forthcoming. In this paper we are focusing on a subset of the data with particular interest in these two questions: how to avoid the hype and focus on what matters most. |
3 | We sent out fourteen invitations in total; only one declined. |
4 | Saturation occurs when the researcher finds no new codes emerging from the dataset [37]. |
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Hull, S.; Liversage, H.; Rizzo, M.P.; Evtimov, V. An Overview of Frontier Technologies for Land Tenure: How to Avoid the Hype and Focus on What Matters. Land 2022, 11, 1939. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11111939
Hull S, Liversage H, Rizzo MP, Evtimov V. An Overview of Frontier Technologies for Land Tenure: How to Avoid the Hype and Focus on What Matters. Land. 2022; 11(11):1939. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11111939
Chicago/Turabian StyleHull, Simon, Harold Liversage, Maria Paola Rizzo, and Vladimir Evtimov. 2022. "An Overview of Frontier Technologies for Land Tenure: How to Avoid the Hype and Focus on What Matters" Land 11, no. 11: 1939. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11111939
APA StyleHull, S., Liversage, H., Rizzo, M. P., & Evtimov, V. (2022). An Overview of Frontier Technologies for Land Tenure: How to Avoid the Hype and Focus on What Matters. Land, 11(11), 1939. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11111939