Topics and Regions
Nicholas J Parkinson is a communications specialist with Tetra Tech ARD who covers USAID-funded land tenure and conservation programs around the world. He is involved in several projects including one of USAID’s largest and most ambitious land tenure investments in Colombia: Land for Prosperity. Nicholas is a former journalist with 10+ years of experience in NGO communications, reporting, and writing in South America, the Middle East, and East and West Africa. He also has led writing workshops that giving local communicators the tools and confidence to communicate the success of their activities. In Colombia, Nicholas is challenged with adapting communications models to an unconventional development project that combines institutional strengthening with land tenure.
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Displaying 11 - 15 of 15Securing Land Rights for Female Farmers in India
By: Thais Bessa, gender advisor at Integrated Land and Resource Governance (ILRG).
Purnima Kora is an ambitious farmer. She owns two small parcels of land that she purchased with her husband’s support and years of savings she earned from farming PepsiCo potatoes and rice, as well as by leveraging micro loans through a women’s self-help group. She also leases another half-acre plot to farm potatoes.
Land Formalization Goes Live
A Colombian Mayor surprises her constituents with land titles and uses live video and social media to spread civic messages about formalizing land tenure
Fuentedeoro’s Mayor, Patricia Mancera, took the world on a digital tour of her town. On Monday last week, Mancera’s team went live on Facebook, while walking door-to-door to deliver registered property titles to dozens of neighbors living in Fuentedeoro’s urban center.
Hope for Land Ownership in Tumaco, Colombia
The pandemic has shown the Colombian government how structural land issues continue to hamper rural development.
Colombia’s hospitals have been challenged due to Covid-19, and while the government rushes to strengthen the country’s healthcare system, intensive care unit occupancy remains high throughout the pandemic.
Titling Priorities
Maritza Losada moved to Puerto Guadalupe five years ago when her husband found a job with a large biomass energy company that grows sugar cane. She and her husband purchased a lot in the town’s poorest neighborhood, Barrio Nuevo. The district remains today much like it was in 1995 when the government created the housing project for future agro-laborers: no roads, no sewage, no gutters.
Land, Front and Center in Colombia
The history of land rights in Colombia is a centuries-old tale of colonialism, highly concentrated land ownership and unsuccessful agrarian reforms. Fifty years of civil strife have left vast sections of the country’s land undocumented, vulnerable to land record manipulation and outright lawlessness.