A Study on Updating the Model for Monitoring and Evaluation of Involuntary Resettlement Based on the Experience of China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. A Literature Review
2.1. Reflection of Modernity: The Logical Basis for the Monitoring and Evaluation of Resettlement
2.2. The Governance of the Risk of Involuntary Resettlement
2.2.1. Risk Prevention and Control: An Engineering Practice of the Governance of the Risk of Involuntary Resettlement
2.2.2. Rights and Benefits Guarantee: A Social Practice of the Governance of the Risk of Involuntary Resettlement
2.2.3. People’s Development: A Political Practice of the Governance of the Risk of Involuntary Resettlement
3. Reflection on and Updating of the Framework for the Monitoring and Evaluation of Resettlement Based on the AGIL Scheme
- Adaptation: a system must cope with external situational exigencies and adapt to its environment according to its needs.
- Goal attainment: a system must define and achieve its primary goals.
- Integration: a system must regulate the interrelationship of its parts. It must also manage the relationship among the other three functional imperatives.
- Latency (pattern maintenance): a system must furnish, maintain, and renew both the motivation of individuals and the cultural patterns that create and sustain the motivation [53].
- Implementation Process of Land Acquisition and House Demolition: this is an overall statement of the overall progress regarding land acquisition and house demolition of the project and objectively describes the overall process of involuntary implementation. In general, this term can also be named as resettlement implementation process.
- Management and Use of the Resettlement Fund: this is an overall description of the use of resettlement funds, facilitating the formation of a preliminary judgment on the quality of APs resettlement.
- Resettlement of APs’ Productivity: this refers to collecting the conditions regarding the resettlement of APs’ productivity, judging the recovery of the associated productivity, communicating, in a timely manner, with the project owners on the problems found, and making corresponding suggestions for improvement.
- Resettlement of APs’ Lives: this unit is involved with collecting the conditions of the resettlement of APs’ lives, judging the recovery of APs’ lives, communicating, in a timely manner with project owners on the problems found, and making corresponding suggestions for improvement.
- Public Participation, Appeal, and Grievance: this unit requires collecting relevant information about APs’ participation, appeal, and grievance in the overall resettlement process to examine, analyze, and judge the performance, problems, and effectiveness of APs’ resettlement.
- Workings and Efficiency of Agencies Responsible for Resettlement: this unit requires collecting relevant information about the operations of the resettlement agencies to examine and judge their effectiveness and the level of related institutional safeguards for resettlement.
- The progress in implementing land acquisition and house demolition, and the management and use of the resettlement fund, constitute the functional imperative of the “Adoption” function. This imperative can indicate whether the resettlement work conducted by project owners has been effectively adapted to the resettlement process in general.
- The “Resettlement of the APs’ Productivity and Resettlement of the APs’ Lives” is the functional imperative of the Goal Attainment” function. This imperative can indicate whether the resettlement has achieved the defined objectives and the quality of the achieved objectives.
- “Public Participation, Appeal, and Grievance” represents the functional imperative of the “Integration” function, indicating whether conflicts have emerged in the resettlement process and whether they have been effectively resolved.
- The workings and efficiency of the agencies responsible for resettlement is the functional imperative of the “Latency” function and can reveal whether the present mechanism effectively ensures the smooth implementation of the resettlement process.
4. Reflection on and Updating of the Monitoring Model of Involuntary Resettlement Based on “Comprehensiveness, Fairness, and Development”
4.1. Reflection on the Monitoring Model of Involuntary Resettlement
4.1.1. The Ineffectiveness of Support for Vulnerable Groups
4.1.2. The Lack of Attention to People’s Development
4.1.3. The Deficiency in the Timeliness of Information Collection
4.2. A Strategy for Updating the Monitoring Model of Involuntary Resettlement
4.2.1. More Attention to Risk-Susceptible Groups
- Groups in poverty: their income conditions before and after resettlement, comparison of employment structures under which they are engaged, and their income satisfaction.
- Older persons: their social support from the government, society, and family members; their daily life and social protections; and their satisfaction with their current situations.
- Left-behind children: their social support from the government and society; their educational status; and their satisfaction with the current situation.
- Women: their income conditions before and after resettlement; the changes in their family status; the guarantee of their legal rights and interests; and their satisfaction with the current situation.
- Ethnic minority groups: their adaptability to the altered cultural environment, i.e., whether their traditional culture can be preserved after resettlement (for those with religious beliefs, it is necessary to verify the extent to which their religious life is affected); their cultural adaptation to the resettlement; and their satisfaction with the current situation.
- Groups with difficulties in livelihood transition: their income conditions before and after resettlement; comparison of the employment structures under which they operate; and their income satisfaction.
4.2.2. More Attention to the Development of APs
- Sustainable livelihoods: the voluntary employment after resettlement; changes in in the means of income of other members of the household; and the influence of the local socio-economic environment in supporting or weakening their livelihoods after resettlement.
- Well-ordered social integration: interest conflicts with persons living in the resettlement area, e.g., regarding land adjustment; and the conditions of culture shock, customary shock, and religious conflicts.
- Stable social insurance: the welfare measures provided by the government; the medical and educational measures provided by the government; the effectiveness of these measures; and whether there are other social organizations providing social security services for the APs, e.g., donations or other development-related resource support.
4.2.3. Enhancing the Efficiency of the Information Collection by Means of “Internet+”
- In the “Resettlement Implementation Process”, after the project owners upload various reports and documents onto the internet platform on the progress of the project implementation, the monitoring agency can promptly understand the progress of the project implementation in each section.
- In the “Management and Use of the Resettlement Funds”, the M&E agencies can upload the written documents on the progress of funds to the monitoring online system to keep track of the flow of funds and facilitate a more timely understanding of the use of funds.
- In the “Resettlement of the APs’ Productivity” and “Resettlement of the APs’ Lives”, the M&E agencies can establish direct communication between themselves and the APs on the internet platform. The APs can promptly give feedback on their productivity and living resettlement, put forward their demands, and propose relevant suggestions.
- In the “Public Participation, Appeal, and Grievance”, the complaints are processed online with the participation of the APs, project owners, the governments responsible for resettlement, and the M&E agencies. Any complaints can be informed in a timely manner through the internet platform, while the project owners, the governments, and the M&E agencies can jointly negotiate and provide relevant solutions online.
- In the “Workings and Efficiency of the Agencies Responsible for Resettlement”, conditions on the workings and efficiency of the agencies responsible for resettlement are submitted to the M&E agencies by the project owners through the internet platform, assisting the M&E agencies in accessing the operation of the agencies without additional time costs.
5. Reflection on and Updating of the Evaluation Model of Involuntary Resettlement Based on “Comprehensiveness, Fairness, and Development”
5.1. Reflection on the Evaluation Model of Involuntary Resettlement
5.2. A Strategy for Updating the Evaluation Model of Involuntary Resettlement
6. Conclusions and Discussion
6.1. Contributions of This Study
6.2. Implications for Practices
6.3. Limitations
6.4. Future Research Prospects
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
M&E | Monitoring and Evaluation |
APs | The Persons Affected |
The WB | The World Bank |
ADB | Asian Development Bank |
IFC | International Finance Corporation |
OD | Operational Directive |
OP | Operational Policy |
BP | Bank Procedure |
RAP | Resettlement Action Plan |
SIA | Social Impact Assessment |
PE | Proactive Evaluation |
CE | Clarificative Evaluation |
InE | Interactive Evaluation |
ME | Monitoring Evaluation |
ImE | Impact Evaluation |
Appendix A
Monitoring Unit | Monitoring Indicators | Methods of Information Collection |
---|---|---|
Resettlement Implementation Progress |
|
|
Management and Use of Resettlement Fund |
|
|
Resettlement of the APs’ Productivity |
|
|
Resettlement of the APs’ Lives |
|
|
Public Participation, Appeal and Grievance |
|
|
Workings And Efficiency of The Agencies Responsible for Resettlement |
|
|
Evaluation Unit | Orientation of the Evaluation | Method of the Evaluation |
---|---|---|
Resettlement Implementation Progress | Objectively examine the general state of the process of the resettlement based on the evaluation on the progress of land acquisition and house demolition and preliminarily judge whether the resettlement can be stably maintained. |
|
Management and Use of Resettlement Fund | Comprehensively predict the quality of the resettlement with fully regarding to the management and use of resettlement fund and inspire the following evaluation. |
|
Resettlement of the APs’ Productivity | Analyze the general conditions and future trends of livelihood patterns of the APs and their productivity structures and offer relevant suggestions to the project owners and the governments responsible for resettlement. |
|
Resettlement of the APs’ Lives | By combining both quantitative and qualitative analysis, the M&E agency analyzes the general conditions of the APs’ living standards and makes professional suggestions to the project owners for their stable improvement.Analyze the general conditions of the APs’ living standards and provide the project owners and the governments responsible for resettlement with relevant suggestion. |
|
Public Participation, Appeal, and Grievance | Objectively assess the effectiveness of public participation and grievances on resettlement and make relevant suggestions. |
|
Workings And Efficiency of The Agencies Responsible for Resettlement | Objectively evaluate the effectiveness of the operation efficiency of the resettlement agencies and make relevant suggestions on the medium-and-long-term capacity building of the agencies. |
|
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Monitoring Unit | Monitoring Indicators | Methods of Information Collection |
---|---|---|
Resettlement of the APs’ Productivity |
|
|
Resettlement of the APs’ Lives |
|
|
Public Participation, Appeal, and Grievance |
|
|
Workings And Efficiency of the Agencies responsible for Resettlement |
|
|
Monitoring Unit | Monitoring Indicators | Methods of Information Collection |
---|---|---|
Resettlement of the APs’ Productivity |
|
|
Resettlement of the APs’ Lives |
|
|
Public Participation, Appeal, and Grievance |
|
|
Workings And Efficiency of the Agencies responsible for Resettlement |
|
|
Evaluation Unit | Evaluation Step | Orientation of the Evaluation | Method of the Evaluation | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
General Evaluation of the Resettlement | Evaluation of the Risk-Susceptible Groups | Evaluation of the Development of the APs | |||
Resettlement Implementation Process and Use of the Resettlement Fund | PE1 | Whether the target setting for the use of resettlement fund is reasonable and suitable? | None | None | Expert Panel; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion |
CE1 |
| None | None | Data Analysis; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
InE1 |
| None | None | Expert Panel; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
ME1 | Whether the realization of the use of resettlement fund can achieve the targets if some measures for improvement are taken? | None | None | Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
ImE1 | How does the use of resettlement funds affect the resettlement of the APs’ productivity and lives at present and in the medium to long term? | None | None | Key Persons Interview of the Staffs of the Agencies; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
Resettlement of APs’ Productivity and Lives | PE2 | Whether the target setting for the resettlement of APs’ productivity and lives is reasonable and suitable? | Whether the target setting for the resettlement of risk-susceptible groups is reasonable and suitable? |
| Expert Panel; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion |
CE2 |
|
|
| Key Persons Interview of the APs; Questionnaire Survey; Statistical Analysis; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
InE2 | What additional support is needed for the realization of the resettlement of APs’ productivity and lives? | What additional support is needed for the realization of the resettlement of risk-susceptible groups? |
| Expert Panel; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
ME2 | Whether the realization of the resettlement of APs’ productivity and lives can achieve the targets if some measures for improvement are taken? | Whether the realization of the resettlement of risk-susceptible groups can achieve the targets if some measures for improvement are taken? |
| Key Persons Interview of the APs; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
ImE2 |
|
|
| Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
Public Participation, Appeal, and Grievance | PE3 |
|
|
| Expert Panel; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion |
CE3 | What is the real performance, efficiency and satisfaction of public participation, appeal and grievance? | What is the real performance, efficiency and satisfaction of public participation, appeal and grievance of the risk-susceptible groups? | What is the real performance, efficiency and satisfaction of public participation, appeal and grievance about the APs’ development? | Key Persons Interview of the APs; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion; Statistical Analysis | |
InE3 | How to improve the working mechanism for public participation, appeal and grievance? | How to improve the working mechanism for public participation, appeal and grievance of the risk-susceptible groups? | How to improve the working mechanism for public participation, appeal and grievance about the APs’ development? | Expert Panel; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
ME3 | Whether the performance of public participation, appeal and grievance can achieve the targets if some measures for improvement are taken? | Whether the performance of public participation, appeal and grievance of the risk-susceptible groups can achieve the targets if some measures for improvement are taken? | Whether the performance of public participation, appeal and grievance about the APs’ development can achieve the targets if some measures for improvement are taken? | Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
ImE3 |
|
|
| Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
Workings and Efficiency of Agencies Responsible for Resettlement | PE4 |
| Are the agencies responsible for resettlement able to effectively manage the risk-susceptible groups’ resettlement? | Are the agencies responsible for resettlement able to effectively manage the APs’ development? | Expert Panel; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion |
CE4 | What is the real effectiveness of these agencies in the process of resettlement? | What is the real effectiveness of these agencies in the process of the resettlement of the risk-susceptible groups? | What is the real effectiveness of these agencies in the process of the APs’ development? | Key Persons Interview of the Staffs of the Agencies and the APs; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
InE4 | What measures should be taken to improve the efficiency of these agencies? | What measures should be taken to improve the efficiency of these agencies for the resettlement of the risk-susceptible groups? | What measures should be taken to improve the efficiency of these agencies for the APs’ development? | Expert Panel; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
ME4 | Whether the efficiency of these agencies is improved by adopting relevant improvement measures? | Whether the efficiency of these agencies for risk-susceptible groups’ resettlement is improved by adopting relevant improvement measures? | Whether the efficiency of these agencies for the APs’ development is improved by adopting relevant improvement measures? | Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion | |
ImE4 | How does the improvement of the efficiency of these agencies affect the satisfaction of public participation, appeal and grievance at present and in the medium to long term? | How does the improvement of the efficiency of these agencies affect the satisfaction of public participation, appeal and grievance of the risk-susceptible groups at present and in the medium to long term? | How does the improvement of the efficiency of these agencies affect the satisfaction of public participation, appeal and grievance about the APs’ development at present and in the medium to long term? | Key Persons Interview of the APs; Empirical Analysis; Focus Group Discussion |
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Lian, H.; Shi, G.; Xu, J. A Study on Updating the Model for Monitoring and Evaluation of Involuntary Resettlement Based on the Experience of China. Processes 2022, 10, 225. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10020225
Lian H, Shi G, Xu J. A Study on Updating the Model for Monitoring and Evaluation of Involuntary Resettlement Based on the Experience of China. Processes. 2022; 10(2):225. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10020225
Chicago/Turabian StyleLian, Huan, Guoqing Shi, and Juan Xu. 2022. "A Study on Updating the Model for Monitoring and Evaluation of Involuntary Resettlement Based on the Experience of China" Processes 10, no. 2: 225. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10020225
APA StyleLian, H., Shi, G., & Xu, J. (2022). A Study on Updating the Model for Monitoring and Evaluation of Involuntary Resettlement Based on the Experience of China. Processes, 10(2), 225. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10020225