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Contents
Full conference programme 3
Welcome to the Development Research Conference 2018 4
Keynote speeches 5
Plenary roundtable 6
Events & exhibitions 7
Panels by date 13
Practical information 46
Maps of the Wallenberg Conference Centre and
the School of Global Studies 47
The conference is organized by the School of Global Studies (SGS) and the
Centre on Global Migration (CGM) at the University of Gothenburg in co-
operation with the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency
(Sida), the Swedish Research Council (VR), and the Gothenburg Centre of
Globalization and Development (GCGD) at the University of Gothenburg.
Organizing committee Isabell Schierenbeck (chair), School of Global Studies Gustav Rudd (conference administrator), School of Global Studies Jenny Fristrand (conference administrator), School of Global Studies Eren Zink, Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida)
Dan Wilhelmsson, Swedish Research Council (VR) Jonas Lindberg, Human Geography at Department of Economy and Society Jan Aart Scholte, School of Global Studies Andrea Spehar, Department of Political Science Fredrik Söderbaum, School of Global Studies
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Full conference program For location of the specific venues: (1A) at Annedalseminariet, School of Global Studies and (W) at Wallenberg Conference Centre, see map on page 47.
Wednesday 22/8 2018
8.30-9.00 Registration
Location: Wallenberg Lobby (W)
9.00-9.15 Opening and introduction by
Isabell Schierenbeck (Deputy Head of
Department – School of Global
Studies), Mattias Goksör (Pro-Vice-
Chancellor at the Univerity of
Gothenburg) and Sven Stafström
(General Director of the Swedish
Research Council)
Location: Wallenbergsalen (W)
9.15-10.15 Keynote speaker Alissa
Trotz
Location: Wallenbergsalen (W)
10.15-10.45 Coffee break
Location: Wallenberg Lobby (W)
10.45-11.45 Keynote speaker David
Simon
Location: Wallenbergssalen (W)
11.45-12.30 Junior Scholar Session
Location: Antarktis (W)
11.45-12.30 Experimental Session
Location: Wallenberg Lobby (W)
12.00-13.00 Swedish Development
Studies Network
Location: Sydamerika (W)
12.30-13.45 Lunch
Location: Restaurang Lyktan (W)
14.15-15.45 Parallel panels:
01, 03.1, 05, 06.1, 13.1, 14, 15, 16.1,
19, 23, 25, 27.1, 30, 34.1, 35 and 44
Location: depending on panel (1A)(W)
15.45-16.15 Coffee break
Location: Floor 1 and 2 (1A)
16.15-17.45 Parallel panels: 03.2, 11,
13.2, 27.2, 34.2, 36, 38.1, 39, 40.1, 43,
46 and 48
Location: depending on panel (1A)(W)
18.00-19.00 Mingle
Location: Wallenberg lobby (W)
19.00-22.00 Dinner for pre-paid
participants
Location: Restaurang Lyktan (W)
Thursday 23/8 2018
9.00-10.30 Parallel panels: 03.3, 04,
07.1, 08, 10.1, 12, 16.2, 18, 22.1, 24.1,
26, 29, 33, 38.2, 40.2, 42, 45.1, 49 and
50
Location: depending on panel (1A)(W)
10.30-11.00 Coffee Break
Location: Floor 1 and 2 (1A)
11.00-12.30 Parallel panels: 06.2, 07.2,
10.2, 17, 20, 21, 22.2, 24.2, 27.3, 28,
31, 37, 41, 45.2 and 47
Location: depending on panel (1A)(W)
13.00-14.15 Lunch
Location: Restaurant Lyktan (W)
14.15-16.15
Plenary round table discussion
Location: Wallenbergsalen (W)
16.15-16.45
Concluding mingle and coffee
Location: Wallbenberg lobby (W)
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Welcome to Gothenburg and the Development Research Conference
2018 – ‘Rethinking Development’
What kind of ‘development’ is wanted for today’s world? The idea, study, and policy field
of ‘development’ emerged in the 1940s, in a time of decolonization, the Cold War, and
Euro-centric high modernism. Seventy years later the scene is one of new emerging
economies, migration crises, multiculturalism, climate change, and new patterns of
infectious and chronic diseases. Given such profound transformations, do we need, again,
to rethink ‘development’?
The biennial Swedish Development Research Conference (DevRes) offers a unique
platform for engaging in current debates on development research and practices. The
conference provides a multi-disciplinary forum for networking and exchange of ideas
between development researchers, policy makers and other non-academic practitioners. In
particular, the conference allows for intellectual dialogue among scholars from different
world regions.
In the last two decades, international development cooperation and development research
have undergone significant changes. The framework of development cooperation has
changed in terms of actors, instruments, and practices. Furthermore, the empirical context
in which international development cooperation plays out has undergone substantial
changes. Today’s development cooperation is part of a wider global policy context. The
traditional distinction of a global North and South is increasingly obsolete, and
development is pursued on multiple scales rather than only within national boundaries. In
addition, the United Nations’ Agenda 2030 recognizes that social, environmental and
economic change are mutually dependent within Sustainable Development.
As a consequence, ‘development’ wants rethinking. For example, do the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs) go far enough in redefining the research and policy agenda?
Do we need to redirect research attention to new and re-emerging issues such as diasporas,
digitization, food security, religion, intellectual property, and health surveillance; or is an
older agenda of trade, democracy and conflict resolution as vital as ever? What place, if
any, remains for ‘aid’ in today’s altered development landscape? Do we need renewed
debate on ethics and positionality in global development research and practice?
To engage these and other debates at the forefront of development studies, the School of
Global Studies (SGS) and the Centre on Global Migration (CGM) at the University of
Gothenburg welcome everybody to the Development Research Conference 2018. We are
grateful for generous funding support from the Swedish Research Council and the Swedish
Development Cooperation Agency (Sida), as well as from the Gothenburg Centre of
Globalization and Development (GCGD).
Isabell Schierenbeck Chair of the Organizing Committee
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Keynote speeches
Migration, Diaspora and Development Agendas: A Cautionary Tale
Alissa Trotz Professor of Carribbean Studies and Women and Gender Studies
New College, University of Toronto 22 August 9.15-10.15 Location: Wallenbergsalen (W)
The call for papers for this conference asks whether we ‘need to ‘rethink’ the
migration-development nexus.’ This is an urgent imperative, at a time when what the late Jamaican economist Norman Girvan has described as a series of ‘existential threats’ is producing the displacement of people on a massive scale. This presentation
responds to this call by critically engaging a fairly recent intellectual and policy-oriented approach that identifies diasporic populations as key to solving the
‘development woes’ of the Global South. It explores how ‘diaspora as possibility’ is being discursively mobilized across an overlapping range of actors and scales that
includes states, development agencies and international financial institutions. In these accounts, diasporics are defined through transnational affective and affinal ties that
can be productively tapped and harnessed to development agendas. Moreover, in our current neoliberal moment, not just any diasporic will do. Drawing on examples
primarily from the Caribbean, this presentation reflects on the unspoken costs of these extra-territorial recruitment efforts that target a narrow and privileged strata of overseas communities. Who and what is elided in the current romance, in which the
diasporic investor gets positioned as the antithesis of the migrant as problem? The
paper urges attention to the limits of this vision of the diaspora-development nexus, one that stands to deepen the very conditions that produce ongoing dispossession and displacement.
Development(alism) is Dead, Long Live Development(alism)! Theory
and Practice in Development Research David Simon Director, Mistra Urban Futures and Professor of Development Geography, Royal
Holloway University of London 22 August 10.45-11.45
Location: Wallenbergsalen (W) The theme of this conference provides an important opportunity to assess the current
state and relationship between theory and practice in development research in our
confusing and challenging global condition. Following the so-called ‘development
impasse’ of the 1980s, it became fashionable to proclaim that development and
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developmentalism were dead. However, there have been major improvements to
human health and wellbeing over the last 70-80 years, and demand for further gains
remains strong. Yet not all have benefited, and the current global upheavals reflect
rebellion at different levels by those who feel themselves to be losers in our globalised
and differentially liberalised predominantly capitalist world order. The mainstream
development ‘industry’ is currently framed more inclusively around the Sustainable
Development Goals. Meaningful progress to achieving them requires real state
capacity, substantive engagement by all relevant stakeholders, and adequate
resourcing of diverse kinds. Conversely, the achievements of anti- and post-
development remain limited, but the search for alternatives continues. This lecture
ends by offering some provocative reflections for development research in troubled
times.
Plenary Roundtable 23 August 14.15-16.15
Location: Wallenbergsalen (W)
The conference rounds off by asking a panel of experts to reflect broadly on
‘Rethinking Development’. Given the profound changes of a more global world, is
there a need (again) for rethinking development? If so, why? And what needs to be
rethought? What is left of development in a new and global world and in a context
with an ever-expanding agenda of issues related to development? Another set of
questions relate to the heavy emphasis in both research and policy on the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs) and Agenda 2030. This begs questions about how should
development researchers and practitioners think about the SDGs? Do the SDGs go far
enough in redefining the research and policy agenda? What are the promises and
pitfalls of the SDGs?
Moderator:
Fredrik Söderbaum, Professor, School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg
Participants:
Elin Bjarnegård, Associate Professor, Department of Government, Uppsala University Erik Lysén, Director of International Affairs, Church of Sweden Henning Melber, Professor & President of the European Association of Development
Research Institutes
Swati Parashar, Associate Professor, School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg
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Events & Exhibitions
Junior Scholar Session 22 August 11.45-12.30 Location: Antarktis (W)
The Junior Scholar Session presents paper proposals from PhD students and early career researchers with the double scope of having the opportunity to discuss and
exchange with leading senior scholars in their field and of receiving extensive feedback on their work-in-progress. Following a brief wide introduction to the
session, the contributors are divided into smaller thematic groups of 3-5 junior scholars and a senior scholar who acts as discussant of the papers. The groups work in parallel. Each presenter gets the opportunity to present their paper, receive in-depth
feedback from the senior scholar, and discuss with the rest of the group as well as the
audience. This format provides a great opportunity for junior scholars to connect with leading scholars in their field and to practice writing, presenting and discussing conference papers. The feedback from senior scholars will include general advice in relation to the paper, such as how to publish in academic journals, how to present
work at a conference, and how to position oneself within a specific field of research.
Experimental Exhibition
Saying More than a Thousand Words 22 August 11.45-12.30 Location: Wallenberg Lobby (W)
‘Rethinking development’ also means to rethink the ways we talk about development. This includes an exploration of possibilities for conversations beyond words that seek
to visualize science in new and engaging ways. We have therefore explicitly invited conference participants to submit contributions that do not fit into conventional paper presentation formats. These can range from two-dimensional visual artworks such as paintings, drawings, graphic art, moving images such as animation, music video, short
narrative film, three-dimensional works such as sculpture, installation, interactive
installation, and performative works in the form of dance, other choreographic works, live performances, lecture-performances, games, sound, spoken words, poetry and music works as ways to communicate development research to fellow participants of
the conference. The following contributions to the experimental exhibition will be
found in the Wallenberg Lobby (W).
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Do I Know You? Katrin Hattenhaur, Artist and PhD candidate at Oxford Brookes University
The sculpture ‘Do I Know You’ is about imagining ourselves in someone else’s
shoes, so we can understand that person better. Understanding others and being understood by others is vital for us. More so in the face of the challenges that everyone of us has to master every day and the conceptual and political challenges in
a globalized world with mass migration and climate change.
I have collected more than 60 pairs of shoes from people from more than 20 different
nations and their stories. Each story is presented in a short video and online. No pair of shoes, no one and no story remains isolated. Rather, they make a whole together with each perspective influencing our understanding the others. Yet, understanding is not solely directed at the other. We too need other perspectives to see clearly who we
are. The Social Sculpture ‘Do I Know You’ is working to visualize fundamental issues of perspective that may help to discuss ethical foundations for the rethinking of the very notion of development. We need to become aware of what we understand or believe to have understood about the others and to rethink how we understand
ourselves and our role in supporting others. The motivation for my sculpture is
simple. Many ills have been with us for generations. Injustice, war, exploitation and inequality remain fixed in our society. It almost seems we are incapable of living together. But if we could truly step into someone else shoes, we would have more
understanding, express more empathy and ultimately our world would be a warmer, fairer and better place for all of us.
Collaborative Comics – Comic exhibition and interactive drawing workshop By Theodor Aalders, PhD candidate at the School of Global Studies This is an exhibition showing parts of my preliminary research results of a fieldwork
conducted earlier this year about the LAPSSET corridor in North Kenya. Part of this
field work was the collaborative production of short comic stories, in which three Kenyan artists worked with interlocutors from different backgrounds to translate their accounts of the project into visual representations. As the LAPSSET project is still
being planned and (apart from some beacons indicating its path) did not yet
materialise on the ground, the aim of this exercise was to enable interlocutors to talk about something concrete – the images created by the artists – in addition to conversations about abstracts hopes, fears and anticipations regarding the project. The contribution I am proposing consists of two parts: a (permanent) exhibition and a
workshop, in which the general premise of ‘collaborative comics’ as a methodological tool can be explored by the participants.
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The Wall Anja Franck, Leon Bergström, Parisa Nasrabadi, School of Global Studies Over the course of 2015 and 2016 several hundred thousand people sought refuge in Europe. This event spurred multiple shifts in policies across European Union member states – resulting in securitized and closed borders as well as new regulations for
asylum and residence. In an attempt to map and visualize these shifts chronologically, we have built a several meter long wooden wall that on one side chronologically displays data on arrivals and policies (from the spring of 2015 to the end of 2016) and on the other side features artwork by the painter Mazdak Tousi. Our intention is that
this wall will provoke new ways of discussing, thinking and theorizing around the
multiple events that we now associate with the notion of a ‘European refugee crisis’.
Swedish Development Studies Network
22 August 12.00-13.00 Location: Sydamerika (W)
Development Studies are well established at universities and other institutions in
Sweden and the other Nordic countries. Unlike Denmark, Finland and Norway, Sweden still lacks a national network and association for development studies.
Initiating a Swedish Development Studies Network could fill this gap to facilitate interaction between scholars in the field of Development Studies and to provide a
forum for cultivating contacts with policy makers and other stakeholders in development research and advocacy. The network would benefit from a close cooperation with the other Nordic Development Studies associations and the
European Association for Development Research and Training Institutes (EADI). It
would join the efforts to continue with a biennial Nordic Development Studies Conference on a rotating basis in the Nordic countries and would also support the Swedish biennial Development Studies Conference.
We invite all interested to this initial meeting. We envisage the establishment of network which aims to: (i) promote Development Studies locally and internationally; (ii) support interaction among scholars in Sweden, the Nordic countries and globally with a shared commitment to Development Studies; (iii) enhance visibility of
Development Studies in the public domain through disseminate and information and research; (iv) seek closer communication and exchange with development policy relevant institutions and organizations in the state and civil society; and (v) welcome scholars in a variety of disciplines.
If there is interest in taking matters further, the network could develop into a formal association. Consultative meetings should then be planned at an opportune event during 2019, with the aim to encourage Swedish academic and other institutions to
join. Such an association should also be open to individual scholars.
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Strengths, Difficulties and Needs within Development Research
22 August 16.15-17.45
Location: SA305 (1A)
The Committee for Development Research at the Swedish Research Council supports
research of relevance for poverty reduction and sustainable development in low-income countries, as well as provide support for collaboration with researchers in
low-income and lower-middle-income countries. The Committee is currently conducting an overview of development research, which will be an important strategic document for the Committee and a basis for advice from the Swedish Research
Council to the Swedish Government for the next research bill in 2020.
You are most welcome to room SA305, 16.15-17.45, 22 August, during the Development Research Conference 2018 for informal discussions with members of
the Committee for Development Research. We look forward to your input on the
overview and advice on the strengths, difficulties and needs within the research area.
SIGHT, Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for the Future 23 August 11:00-12:30 Location: Asien (W) Moderators: Sara Causevic and Johan Dahlstrand
The Swedish Institute for Global Health Transformation (SIGHT) was established as an institute under the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 2017. SIGHT’s vision
is to improve health and wellbeing for all with a focus on vulnerable groups. The purpose is to promote an interdisciplinary approach, to strengthen and bridge Swedish
research and education, and to provide a scientific basis for national and transnational policy work in global health.
In 2015 the UN General Assembly adopted the SDGs as part of a transformative universal framework for global development, the 2030 Agenda. Since the 17 goals
and 169 targets are interconnected they have to be tackled in an integrated way. The
interlinkages could be synergetic, but also trade-offs exist between social, economic and environmental goals. In order to implement the SDGs there is a need for method development, including modelling the above both theoretically and in the real world, with applications in different contexts. Essential here is respectful and transparent
partnerships, goal 17. The two SIGHT programmes, student network and fellows, are interdisciplinary and represent a resource base for the future.
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The modelling will use example themes, including relationships between SDG 3
(health and wellbeing), SDG 5 (gender equality), and SDG 16 (peace and institutions), applying scoring approaches and assessing the interlinkages between the
respective targets. The challenge to go from multidisciplinary to interdisciplinary approaches will also be addressed. The aim is furthermore to contextualise this development exercise into a few countries, focusing on middle- and low-income
settings.
Furthermore, the different dimensions of student and young researchers’ involvement in the implementation of the SDGs will be discussed. This includes knowledge,
attitudes to the SDGs and targets, and their realism, but even more ‘the-how’ aspects,
namely the implementation of the goals. Here targets of many of the SDGs are involved but the focus will be on SDG 16 (accountable institutions) as well as SDG 17 (partnerships). Swedish experience regarding institutional capacity development
with institutions in low-income countries will be referred to.
EBA: Rethinking Evaluation of Development Cooperation in a New Era 23 August 11:00-12:30
Location: SA 204 (1A) Moderator: Helena Lindholm, Chair, Expert Group for Aid Studies (EBA)
Panelists: Anders Troedsson, Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs; Johan Schaar, Expert Group for Aid Studies (EBA); Jan Aart Scholte, School of Global Studies,
Stephan Klingebiel, German Development Institute (DIE); Kerstin Sahlin, Swedish Research Council (VR); Pernilla Sjöquist Rafiqui, Evaluation Unit, Sida
A changing world necessitates dynamically changing systems for aid and international development cooperation. Factors such as the emergence of new economies, migration processes, climate change and public health challenges accordingly need to be taken into account in the provision of, and research on, international development
assistance. The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Agenda 2030 directly affect the design of national, as well as international development policy.
Protracted wars and humanitarian disasters affect long-term development assistance.
Fragile states and weak institutions mean that assistance operates in challenging and
complex environments, with potential consequences on long-term gains and sustainability. How then can evaluations and research on development assistance and cooperation be improved to better relate to this complex and constantly changing
reality? How are opportunities for effective evaluation affected by changes in international development policy? What is important to focus on? How can we
understand the relationship between humanitarian aid and development cooperation? What role can research play in evaluating and understanding development cooperation
in a changing world?
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Stockholm Resilience Center: Building Bridges and Forging
Connections: Science-Practitioner Alliances for Sustainable
Development 23 August 2018 9.00-10.30 Location: SA 204 (1A)
The aim of this roundtable is to build academic-development practice alliances and shared understandings to ameliorate research-practice disconnects. We seek to strengthen social-ecological systems (SES) development research and development practice through building dialogue around different perspectives, interests and
priorities of Roundtable participants.
There continues to be a disconnect between sustainable development scholarship and research with development policy, policy implementation and practice. These gaps
occur between social development research and practice, such as in gender equality,
and also on environmental issues, such as understanding and preventing ecological regime shifts. In addition, the relationship, feedback and cross-scale implications between the social and ecological remain conceptually disjointed across research and
practice. These gaps and disconnects can generate unexpected, and sometimes
undesirable, outcomes in fast-changing landscapes. They are interlinked through complex pathways, such as in sustainable development objectives to mitigate and adapt to climate and environmental change, maintain biodiversity and ecosystem
service flows, improve farmer livelihoods , and enhance social justice.
To address this issue, the Stockholm Resilience Centre’s GRAID (Guidance for
Resilience in the Anthropocene: Investments for Development) program offers a side event at the Development Research Conference. We propose to engage sustainable development academic and practitioner communities in policy and practice to debate synergies and dissonances in understanding and doing sustainable development. In
particular, we frame our discussion through understandings of historical perspectives, situated contexts of social differentiation, and equity and agency can both advance and complicate development practice in changing social and ecological landscapes. The event will be guided by the questions:
What are the frontier topics in SES development research that can support doing development differently (as evident at the conference)?
What are the big issues pressing or constraining development practice?
Where do answers to questions 1 and 2 converge, diverge and intersect?
How can we build on these synergies to further sustainable development goals
through innovative research, evaluation and policy?
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Panels by date
22 August 14.15-15.45
PANEL 01
Reconfiguring Power: Investors, Ruling Elites and Local
Populations. Chairs: Malin Nystrand and Lars Buur Location: SA127 (1A)
A local level assessment of the implementation and implications of a large -
scale land acqusistion in the Lower Limpopo, Mozambique. Juliana Porsani, Södertörn University, Sweden; Kari Lehtilä, Södertörn University, Sweden; Rickard Lalander, Södertörn University, Sweden; Lowe Börjeson, Stockholm University, Sweden; Martina Caretta, West Virginia University, USA
Mafia Dynamics: Key to understand how land investments restructure local agrarian systems in Tanzania. Joanny Belair, University of Ottawa.
Reconfiguring holding power in the Mozambican sugar industry. Lars Buur, Roskile University.
Local exchange deals in Tanzanian Rice Investments: Land, conflict, and economic opportunities. Eileen Dyer Jarnholt, Roskilde University, Denmark, Utrecht University, the Netherlands; Lars Buur, Roskilde University, Denmark;
Faustin Maganga, University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Adjustment of power in agricultural investments in northern Uganda? Malin J. Nystrand, University of Gotenburg.
PANEL 03.1
Air Pollution in Developing Regions; Climate and Health Chairs: Marie Thynell and Johan Boman
Location: SA128 (1A)
Air pollution at a background site in Rwanda. August Andersson, University of Stockholm, Sweden; Elena Kirillova, University of Stockholm, Sweden; Langley DeWitt, MIT, USA
Atmospheric Pollution in the city of Douala by Particles Matters (PM10, PM2.5) and Pollutant Molecules (03; NO2; SO2; NOx). Robert Mbiake, University Of Douala, Cameroon; Eloge Tiekwe, University Of Douala, Cameroon; Linda Fotso Ngam’nye, University Of Douala, Cameroon; Etienne Mfoumou,
Novia Societa Community College
High rate of antibiotic resistance among pneumococci carried by healthy
children in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo and northern Tanzania. Matilda Emgård, University of Gothenburg, Sweden;
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Archippe M. Birindwa, University of Gothenburg, Sweden, Panzi Hospital,
Bukavu, Democratic Republic of Congo, Université Evangélique en Afrique, Bukavu, Democratic Republic of Congo;
Balthazar Muhigirwa, Panzi Hospital,
Bukavu, Democratic Republic of Congo; Sia E. Msuya, Institute of Public Health, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University College (KCMUCo), Tanzania, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre (KCMC), Tanzania; Balthazar M. Nyombi,
Institute of Public Health, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University College
(KCMUCo), Tanzania, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre (KCMC), Tanzania; Dominic Mosha, Institute of Public Health, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University College (KCMUCo), Tanzania; Magnus Lindh, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Rune Andersson, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Susann
Skovbjerg, University of Gothenburg, Sweden;
Global Emission Reduction through Waste Management Projects under Clean Development Mechanism (CDM): A Good Start but a Bad Ending! Md
Mustafa Saroar and Nuzhat Fatema, Khulna University of Engineering &
Technology, Bangladesh
PANEL 05
Big Push and Great Letdown: on the Ambivalence of
Development Zones and Corridors
Chair: Jan Bachmann and Per Knutsson Location: SA407 (1A)
South-South Cooperation through Development Corridors in Mozambique: between solidarity and business as usual. Eric Cezne, University of Groningen, the Netherlands
The thing that makes things flow: conceptualizing corridors. Finn Stepputat, Danish Institute for International Studies, Denmark; Tobias Hagmann, Roskilde
University, Denmark
The disappearing railway? The ambivalent politics of big infrastructure
projects in Niger. Gabriella Körling, Stockholm University, Sweden
Controversial corridor: Towards a research agenda for exploring the political dimension of the LAPSSET development corridor in Kenya. Jan Bachmann,
University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Per Knutsson, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Hussein Mahmoud, Technical University of Mombasa; Benard Kilaka, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
East Africa’s corridor agenda, new (im)mobilities and rural livelihoods. Charis
Enns, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom
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PANEL 06.1
Colonial Legacies, Postcolonial ‘Selfhood’ and (Un)doing
Development in the Global South Chair: Swati Parashar and Maria Eriksson Baaz Location: SA203 (1A)
White Angels and Black Hell: Revisiting Steve Biko’s Struggle for Liberating
Black Consciousness from Whiteness Complex. Ramy Magdy Abdelmonem Ahmed, Cairo University, Egypt.
Displacement and the legitimization of violence in development policy. Aram Ziai, University of Kassel, Germany
Development, Security and the ‘State’ of Conflict: Mother Inda’s Maoist Children. Swati Parashar, Gothenburg University, Sweden
'The company is here to do goodness to us': Development discourse, postcolonialism, and patronage in Sierra Leone's large -scale land deals. Caitlin
Ryan and Deborah Bakker, University of Groningen, The Netherlands
PANEL 13.1
Disaggregated Analyses of Aid Effectiveness Chair: Arne Bigsten Location: SA219 (1A)
Can cash transfers to contribute to building more sustainable rural
livelihoods? Investigating the potential developmental role of the Child Support Grant in South Africa. Flora Hajdu, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Sweden; Stefan Granlund, SLU, Sweden; David Neves, University of the Western Cape, South Africa; Tessa Hochfeld, University of Johannesburg,
South Africa; Emil Sandström, SLU, Sweden Foreign Aid and Civil Society: A Spatial Approach. Joseph Vecci, Gothenburg
University, Sweden; Tomas Zelinsky, Technical University of Kosice, Slovakia The donor footprint and gender gaps. Maria Berlin, Evelina Bonnier and Anders
Olofsgård, SITE - Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden Foreign aid and structural transformation. Pelle Ahlerup, University of
Gothenburg, Sweden
Chinese aid and local corruption. Ann-Sofie Isaksson, University of Gothenburg,
Sweden.
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PANEL 14
Bridging the Political/Civil Divide: Civil Society Rights
Mobilization and Political Change Chair: Richard Georgi, Johan Karlsson Schaffer and Camilla Orjuela Location: SA303 (1A)
How Does the Civil Society Strengthen Vietnam’s Democracy? Review of Civil Society Contribution to Vietnam’s Democracy. Cuong Manh Nguyen, Hanoi
University, Vietnam
Human Rights Activism in Conflicts at Crossroads – A study of Political Agency in the Zapatista Movement. Richard Georgi, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Human rights and marginalized groups: the usage of the concept. Elena Samonova, University of Helsinki, Finland
Title 1: Civil Society Contribution to Development and Democracy:
Addressing the Dilemma of Two Publics and Title 2: Mitigating conflict and
violence between and among refugees and host communities in the West Nile region: Towards sustainable people -to-people approaches. Lino Ika, Uganda Martyrs University
Turning every stone; diasporas and legal mobilization after mass atrocities . Camilla Orjuela, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
PANEL 15
Development: Inclusive or Exclusive for People on the Margins? Chair: Mikela Lundahl Hero Location: SA403 (1A)
Who benefit from the state -led ‘golden decade’ of recent Bolivian economic growth? A multidimensional approach & analysis. Roberto Carlos Jiménez
Espinal, Swisscontact, Bolivia
Intersectoral approaches and integrated services in achieving the right to health for refugees upon resettlement: a scoping review. Dena Javadi, World Health Organization, Switzerland; Sara Causevic, Swedish Institute for Global
Health Transformation; Etienne Langlois, World Health Organization, Switzerland;
Shirley Ho, World Health Organization, Switzerland; Peter Friberg, Swedish Institute for Global Health Transformation; Goran Tomson, Swedish Institute for Global Health Transformation
Lest We Forget the Place of Persons With Disabilities in National Development: Nigeria in Context. Halima Kutigi, Nasarawa State University, Keffi, Nigeria
Same wealth, different levels of development in oil-rich economies of Nigeria and Norway: What makes the difference? Francis Onditi, Riara University,
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Kenya
PANEL 16.1
Development and Gender: Present Perspectives and New
Frontiers
Chair: Edme Dominguez R and Hauwa Mahdi
Location: SA305 (1A)
Examining gender assemblages in food crop production in western Kenya. Hellen Vilita Kimanthi, Wageningen University, Netherlands
Gender Based Violence a hinderance to development. Joan Akampurira, Global
ICT-CARE, Uganda
Conservation Agriculture, Gendered Impacts on Households Livelihood Outcomes in Zambia. Olipa Zulu and Antony Chapoto, Indaba Agricultural Policy
Research Institute, Zambia
Structural violence and Silencing - religious masculinities and violations of the girl child. Hauwa Mahdi, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Feminisation of Agriculture? Changing gender relations in the context of male
emigration in the Eastern Gangetic Plains. Stephanie Leder, Swedish University
of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Sweden
PANEL 19
Development in a Hostile Climate: Exploring the Adaptation-
Development Nexus Chair: Carola Klöck and Kevin Michael Adams Location: SA325 (1A)
The Trend of Climate Risk Insurances in International Development and
Climate Change Policy — An Analysis of Actors, Interests, Expertise and Shifting Values. Marie-Lena Hutfils, Zeppelin Universität, Germany
New and additional? Development aid and adaptation finance. Matthew Dornan, Australian National University, Australia; Carola Klöck, University of
Göttingen, Germany; Florian Weiler, University of Basel, Switzerland
Household resilience capacities to climate change shocks and stresses in Mbale
municipality in eastern Uganda. George Oriangi, Makerere University, Uganda; Frederike Albrecht, Uppsala University, Sweden; Giuliano Dibaldassarre, Uppsala
University, Sweden; Yazidhi Bamutaze, Makerere University, Uganda; Paul Isolo
Mukwaya, Makerere University, Uganda; Petter Pilesjö, Lund University, Sweden
18
From anthropogenic to indiogenic climate change – The translation of global adaptation discourses into project realities in Cusco, Peru. Morgan Scoville-
Simonds, University of Oslo, Norway
Adapting Pakistan to the global climate: the transmission of adaptation policy framework at the national and sub-national levels. Hameed Jamali, IHE Delft Institute for Water Education, the Netherlands
PANEL 23
Peace Education and Quality Education Chair: Michael Schulz Location: SA506 (1A)
Ontological Obstacles to Peace Education in Colombia. Robert Ian Skinner,
University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
Rethinking Classroom Conflict: Oxymoron or Educational Opportunity?
Elizabeth Marie Olsson, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Youth and Women Empowerment through Education in Goma, Democratic
Republic of Congo. Alain Mitondo Hamisi, UGADEC, Democratic Republic of
the Congo
PANEL 25
Feminist Foreign Policy and Feminist Aid: Rethinking Gender
and Development
Chair: Elin Bjarnegård and Liam Swiss Location: SA410 (1A)
Gender Mainstreaming in the Danish International Development Agency (Danida) - A Panecea for Development? Diana Højlund Madsen, Gender Researcher, Denmark
Intersectionality and the Transformative Potential of Swedish Feminist
Foreign Policy. Mia-Lie Nylund, Elin Bjarnegård and Sandra Håkansson, Uppsala
University, Sweden
Canada’s Feminist Foreign Policy Promises: An Ambitious Agenda for Gender Equality, Human Rights, Peace and Security. Rebecca Tiessen,
University of Ottawa, Canada
How Feminist is Canada’s Feminist Foreign Aid? Samantha Morton, Judyannet Muchiri and Liam Swiss. Memorial University, Canada
19
PANEL 27.1
External Influence over Regional Organizations and Regionalism
Chair: Fredrik Söderbaum and Sören Stapel Location: Antarktis (W)
Regionalism from Without: How external actors support, shape and undermine regionalism in Africa. Fredrik Söderbaum and Sören Stapel, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
The power of bureaucratization: influence through external aid at the African
Union. Ueli Staeger, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies (IHEID), Switzerland
Changes in Donor Support to Regional Organisations in Africa. Jan
Vanheukelom and Kesa Pharathlathle, ECDPM, Belgium
Circumvented or made centre stage? The position of African regional organisations in donor support to regional integration. Frank Mattheis, University of Pretoria, South Africa
PANEL 30
The Legitimacy of Governing Development
Chair: Nora Stappert Location: SA505 (1A)
The Legitimacy of Governing Development. Emmanuel Nkongho Egbe, Community Visioning Association (NGO), Cameroon
Trade and taxation in a ‘post’-conflict state: Evidence from traders on Congo
River. Ola Olsson, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Structural Understandings of Legitimacy in Development Governance . Jan
Aart Scholte, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Future -Talk as a Practice of Legitimation? Nora Stappert, University of
Gothenburg, Sweden; Catia Gregoratti, Lund University, Sweden
In the Eye of Which Beholder? The Authority of the Implementation Review
Mechanism of the UN Convention against Corruption. Hortense Jongen,
Gothenburg University
20
PANEL 34.1
Restore More - it's all about Multifunctional Landscapes
Chair: Ewa Wredle, Gert Nyberg and Per Knutsson
Location: SA419 (1A)
Waiting in the Drylands for a Dead Goat: Creating State Subjects through Livestock Breeding Programs. Julia Elise Viktoria Wernersson, University of
Copenhagen, Denmark
Enclosures as land management tool in African Drylands; to be or not to be is not the question. Gert Nyberg, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
(SLU), Sweden; Stephen Mureithi, University of Nairobi, Kenya; Madelene
Ostwald, the University of Gothenburg, Sweden
14 years of fire-related research in Miombo Woodlands, Niassa National Reserve, Mozambique. Natasha Sofia RIbeiro, Department of Forest Engineering,
Faculty of Agronomy and Forest Engineering, UEM; Romana Bandeira, Department of Forest Engineering, Faculty of Agronomy and Forest Engineering, UEM; Aniceto Chauque, Department of Forest Engineering, Faculty of Agronomy and Forest Engineering, UEM; Ana Isabel Ribeiro-Barros,
PlantStress&Biodiversity - LEAF, School of Agriculture
Balancing production and ecosystem services from degraded tropical rain forests to aid the transition to a more sustainable bio-based economy. Niles J. Hasselquist and Ulrik Ilstedt, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden
What future for primates? Conservation struggles in Cross River State, Nigeria. Torsten Krause, Tobias Dan Nielsen, Veiko Lehsten, Ola Olsson and
Fariborz Zelli, Lund University, Sweden
Rangeland enclosures as a means of future -making - lessons from Eastern
Africa. John N. Wairore, University of Nairobi, Kenya; Gert Nyberg, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU); Stephen M. Mureithi, University of
Nairobi, Kenya; Oliver V. Wasonga, University of Nairobi, Kenya; Detlef Müller-
Mahn, Institute of Geography, University of Bonn, Germany; Anja Linstädter, University of Cologne, Germany, Institute of Crop Science and Resource Conservation (INRES), University of Bonn, Germany.
PANEL 35
Researching the Local: From Context to Knowledge Chair: Hanna Leonardsson and Alexandra Bousiou Location: SA527 (1A)
Women, Self-Help Groups and empowerment: The usefulness Communities of Practice (CoP) for social learning. Sunita Dhal, Indira Ghandi National Open
21
University, India; Linda Lane, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Nilima
Srivastava, Indira Ghandi National Open University, India
Gender and Nutrition Measurement Tools: Evaluating Their Appropriateness
in the Context of Western Province, Zambia. Mulako Kabisa and Rhoda Mofya-Mukuka, Indaba Agricultural Policy Research Institute, Zambia
What can we learn from contextualization? Epistemological thoughts on
studying the local in peacebuilding. Hanna Leonardsson, University of Gotheburg, Sweden
Context, knowledge and edification. Jörgen Hellman, Anette Hellman and Isabell Schierenbeck, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Governance responses to the ‘refugee crisis’ at the local level: The case of the Southeastern European island borders. Alexandra Bousiou, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
PANEL 44
Good Governance and Public Goods: the Challenges of Efficient
Service Delivery in the Developing World Chair: Ruth Carlitz
Location: SA406 (1A)
Transparency for Whom? Transparency and Local Public Goods Provision in Non-Democratic Settings. Ruth Carlitz and Monika Bauhr, University of
Gothenburg, Sweden
One Stop Shops for Public Services – Evidence from Citizen Service Centers in Brazil. Anders Fredriksson, University of São Paulo, Brazil
We Don't Need No Education: Resource Endowments and the Demand for
Social Service Provision. Hans Lueders, Stanford University, USA; Ellen Lust, Program on Governance and Local Development, University Gothenburg, Sweden;
Jumana Alaref, World Bank
Community Health Workers, Child Health and Health Care Utilization in Kenya. Josephine Gakii Gatua, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
22
22 August 16.15-17.45
PANEL 03.2
Air Pollution in Developing Regions; Climate and Health Chair: Marie Thynell and Johan Boman Location: SA128 (1A)
Clinical Approach in the Study of the Health Effects of Air Pollution. Robert
Mbiake, University of Douala, Cameroon; Eloge Tiekwe, University of Douala,
Cameroon, Université of Dschang, Cameroon; Phelix Telefo, Université of Dschang, Cameroon; Linda Fotso Ngam’nye, University of Douala, Cameroon
An integrated inter-disciplinary approach to well-being, air quality
management and city development in Nairobi. Johan Boman, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Marie Thynell, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Samuel
Mwaniki Gaita, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Michael Gatari, University of
Nairobi, Kenya
Participatory environmentalism: Mobilising citizens for air pollution mitigation and improved environmental health in India. Patrik Oskarsson,
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Sweden; Devanshi Chanchani,
University of East Anglia
PANEL 11
Digitization and Development Chair: Jan Aart Scholte Location: SA127 (1A)
Can your attention save lives? Development cooperation for human rights as
digital business and moral fix. Florencia Enghel, Jönköping University, Sweden
Exploring Tunisia’s digital strategy – preliminary findings from field research. Kerstin Fritzsche, Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies (IASS), Germany
Rethinking Agricultural Advisory System for Farmers in Bangladesh
from Climate Change and Livelihood Perspective: A case on Geodata Driven Precision Agriculture System in Bangladesh. Hasib Ahsan, mPower Social Enterprises Ltd., Bangladesh; Huib Hengsdijk, Wageningen University; Nurul
Islam, Agriculture Information Service; Arnold Moene, Wageningen University; Tessa Schmelzer, ICCO; Abu Syad, Bangladesh Centre for Advanced Studies; Eric van Valkengoed, TerraSphere Imaging & GIS B.V.
23
PANEL 13.2
Disaggregated Analyses of Aid Effectiveness Chair: Arne Bigsten
Location: SA219 (1A)
Choice of Foreign-funded NGO project location - Comparative study of Nepal
and Bangladesh. Dipendra KC, Thammasat University, Thailand
The effectiveness of budget support – an evaluation synthesis. Magdalena Luisa Orth and Gunnar Gotz, German Institute for Development Evaluation, Germany
Lists to meaning: an analysis of systems thinking for development. Odirilwe
Selomane, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research; L. Jamila Haider, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden; Andrea S. Downing, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden
Who had the idea to build up a village organization? Some evidence from
Senegal and Burkina Faso. Cecilia Navarra, independent researcher, Sweden; Elena Vallino, University of Torino, Italy
PANEL 27.2
External Influence over Regional Organizations and Regionalism Chair: Fredrik Söderbaum and Sören Stapel
Location: Antarktis (W)
Governing the ECOWAS Region: Regional Agency, Demands and External Actors. Oluwabamidele Ibrahim Kogbe, University of Dundee, United Kingdom
Understanding ownership at the regional level. Sally Anna Kristina
Wennergren, the University of Gothenburg, Sweden
The Regional Dimension of Sino-African Development Cooperation. Georg Lammich, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany
Donor Influence on Regional Civil Society Networks in Southern Africa.
Merran Hulse, Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE), Germany
PANEL 34.2
Restore More - it's all about Multifunctional Landscapes
Chair: Ewa Wredle, Gert Nyberg and Per Knutsson Location: SA419 (1A)
Perspectives on enclosures and landscape fragmentation. Gert Nyberg, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden (SLU); John Wairore, University of Cologne, Germany; Stephen Mureithi, University of Nairobi, Kenya; Per Knutsson,
Gothenburg University, Sweden; Ewa Wredle, SLU, Sweden
24
Approaches for resilience building through restoration of degraded dryland in Kenya. John N. Wairore, University of Cologne, Germany; Stephen M. Mureithi,
University of Nairobi, Kenya; Ann Verdoodt, Ghent University, Belgium
Sustainable use of water for productive and multifunctional landscapes. Anna Evelyn Tengberg, Swedish Water House, Stockholm International Water Institute, Sweden
Livestock keeping on rangelands in the drylands - mission impossible in the future? Ewa Wredle, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Sweden; Stephen Mureithi, University of Nairobi, Kenya
Good Wood – creating a market for wood that drives forest rehabilitation and
local development. Aaron Kaplan, The Eco Innovation foundation, Sweden
Restoring multifunctional landscapes by bridging the agriculture -forestry divide in policy and practice. Ingrid Oborn, Swedish University of Agricultural
Sciences (SLU), Sweden
PANEL 36
Researching LGBTQ Rights in Restrictive Contexts: Theories,
Methods, Ethics Chair: Cecilia Strand Location: SA303 (1A)
Perils of coming out: Navigating dilemmas of queer visibility under state
homophobia in Russia (and beyond). Emil Edenborg, Swedish Institute of
International Affairs, Sweden
Accessing sexual minorities in Uganda- an exploration of methodological challenges and ethical considerations. Cecilia Strand, Uppsala University,
Sweden; Jakob Svensson, MAH, Sweden
The Humanitarian Queer Gap: How International Humanitarian
Organizations (Do Not) Address Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
Issues in Humanitarian Protection and Assistance. Sören Stapel, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Liv Gustafsson, Swedish Red Cross
PANEL 38.1
Privitization and Marketization of Development Aid - New
Trends? New Challenges? Chair: Camille Pellerin and Maria Eriksson Baaz Location: SA527 (1A)
Rethinking food security policy of the G7 countries. Dagmar Milerová Prášková, Charles University, Faculty of Science, Czech Republic
25
Retained aid: Development assistance and the private sector in sub-Saharan Africa's electricity sector. Philipp Andrew Trotter, University of Bath, United
Kingdom; Sabah Abdullah, University of Queensland, Australia
Disarming emancipatory work? Conditions for emancipatory work in Swedish
international development CSOs in an era of marketization and management trends. David Scott, Karlstad University, Sweden
We all want the goat! A reflection on the marketization of NGO communication. Kajsa Johansson, Linnaeus University, Sweden
PANEL 39
The Politics of the Sustainable Development Goals Chair: Kristina Jönsson and Magdalena Bexell Location: SA408 (1A)
Functional Fungibility: Determinants and conditions for potentially positive
fungibility of Development Assistance for Health in Developing Countries.
Zunera Ahmad Rana, Rhine Waal University of Applied Sciences, Germany; Prof. Dr. Dirk-Jan Koch, Radbound University, Nijmegen
The Sustainable Development Goals and Donor Commitments to Multi-
Stakeholder Partnerships: The case of Canada. Liam Swiss, Memorial University, Canada
The mathematics of sustainable development: How processes add up, down and sideways. Andrea Sophia Downing, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden;
Grace Y Wong, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden; Odirilwe Selomane,
Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden; Patrick Flege, Aquatic Ecology department, Wageningen University, Netherlands; Michelle Dyer, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden; Amanda Jiménez Aceituno, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden
Legitimation challenges of the Sustainable Development Goals in domestic policy-making. Kristina Jönsson and Magdalena Bexell, Lund University, Sweden
Equity in national and sub-national climate-informed development policy
processes: Use of a policy-influence model. Jessica Aywa Omukuti, University of Reading, Tanzania
The SDGs through the prism of human securities. Anders Troedsson, Dept of
Political Science, Sweden
26
PANEL 40.1
The Opportunities and Challenges in Urban and Peri-urban
Agriculture and the Role for Science-based Policies and Practices Chair: Johanna Bergman Lodin and Ulf Magnusson Location: SA407 (1A)
Urban and peri-urban agriculture in Bamako, Mali. Karl Gunnar Jacks, Royal
Inst. of Technology (KTH), Sweden; Sanata Traoré, Université de Bamako, Mali
Urban livestock keeping in Hanoi: policies, risks and benefits. Johanna Lindahl, International Livestock Research Institute, Kenya; Long T Pham, Department of
Animal Health, Vietnam; Thang T Nguyen, International Livestock Research
Institute, Kenya; Frida Jakobsen, Uppsala University, Sweden; Hung Viet Nguyen, International Livestock Research Institute, Kenya
Place of social capital in indigenous leafy vegetables marketing in Benin. Soulé
Akinhola Adechian, Mohamed Nasser Baco, Irénikatché Pierre B. Akponikpe, André Jonas Djenontin, Carole Nadia A. Vihotogbe-Sossa and Fructueuse Noudéhou Ouidoh, l'Université de Parakou, Benin
Regionalization of urban food systems and its climate benefits. Prajal Pradhan,
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Germany; Steffen Kriewald,
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Germany; Luis Costa, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Germany; Diego Rybski, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Germany; Günther Fischer,
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), Austria; Jürgen Kropp, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Germany
PANEL 43
Resistance between Contention and Counter-Hegemony:
Towards an Understanding of Social Development as Enacting
Alternatives Chair: Richard Georgi and Minoo Koefoed Location: SA506 (1A)
Buen vivir in Ecuador and Bolivia: Indigenous alternative concepts of development between theory and practice. Wolfgang Muno, University of Mainz, Germany
Mete tèt ansanm (Let's put our heads together) – Reflections on the political potential of Haitian solidarity movements to enact alternatives . Julia Schöneberg, EADI/ University of Kassel, Germany
The displaced materiality of climate change: Bringing the social in again. Christine Loew, Rhine-Waal University of Applied Sciences, Germany
27
PANEL 46
(Un)Sustainable Migration Regimes: Experiences from the
Global South Chair: Anja K Franck Location: SA404 (1A)
Tackling Refugee Crisis with Social Protection Programs: Empowering Effects of Aid Policies on Mobility of Migrants. Berivan Erbil, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
From the Sending State: Regulating the movement of Mexican guestworkers.
Joseph Trawicki Anderson, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Migration trajectories and the migration industry: a theoretical framework. Emanuelle Brandström Arellano, the University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Citizenship at the regional level: the case of ECOWAS citizenship. Amalie Ravn Weinrich, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
PANEL 48
Actual Development Subjects; Local Economic Agency and
Economic Development Chair: Erik Andersson Location: SA410 (1A)
Beyond External Financing - Opportunities for Sustainable Entrepreneurship under REDD+. Sara Löfqvist and Adrian Muller, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
The rush for oil and gas in Kenya: Does community grievances matter? Michael Omondi Owiso, Maseno University, Kenya; Bernard Kilaka Musembi, Gothenburg University, Sweden
Kinship and Risk; Informal financial institutions in Rwanda. Janviere
Ntamazeze, Gothenburg University, Sweden
28
23 August 9.00-10.30
PANEL 03.3
Air Pollution in Developing Regions; Climate and Health Chair: Marie Thynell and Johan Boman Location: SA128 (1A)
Atmospheric Dispersion and Concentration Modeling by Aermod and Calroad. Linda Ngam’nye Fotso, University of Douala, Cameroon; Robert
Mbiake, University of Douala, Cameroon; Annie Beya-Wakata, University of Yaoundé, Cameroon; Etienne Mfoumou, Societa Navia Community College;
Christophe Bobda, University of Arkansas
Roadside air quality Measurements in Nairobi: Short studies contribution by Graduate Students of University of Nairobi. Michael J. Gatari Gichuru,
University of Nairobi, College of Architecture and Engineering, Kenya; Samson
Murangiri Mukaria, University of Nairobi, Wangari Maathai Institute for Peace and Environmental Studies, Kenya; Ann Njeri Ng'endo, University of Nairobi, College of Architecture and Engineering, Kenya
The role of Air Quality Management in China’s rise to an ‘ecological
civilization’ with examples from Hong Kong, SAR, and the Pearl River Delta. Marie Thynell, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
PANEL 04
Animal Health in Development Chair: Johanna Lindahl and Jonas Johansson Wensman Location: SA408 (1A)
Improving human health through hygiene interventions in dairy farming. Ram
Pratim Deka, International Livestock Research Institute, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Sweden; Johanna Lindahl, International Livestock
Research Institute, SLU, Uppsala University, Sweden; Delia Grace, International Livestock Research Institute
Prevalence and risk factors of subclinical mastitis in dromedary camels in
pastoralists herds in Isiolo, Kenya. Dinah Seligsohn, National Veterinary Institute, Sweden, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Sweden; Wario Sori, Kenyatta University, Kenya; Mario Younan, National Veterinary Institute, Sweden; Ann-Kristin Nyman, Växa, Sverige; Erika Chenais, National
Veterinary Institute, Sweden; Set Bornstein, National Veterinary Institute, Sweden; Ilona Gluecks, International Livestock Research Institute, Kenya; Jane Morrell, SLU, Sweden; Kerstin de Verdier, National Veterinary Institute, Sweden
29
Improving health and productivity in camelids through artificial insemination. Jane M Morrell, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Sweden
An Interdisciplinary Approach Addressing Ticks and Tick-Borne Diseases of Cattle in Uganda. Lawrence Mugisha, Ecohealth Research Group, Conservation & Ecosystem Health Alliance (CEHA), College of Veterinary Medicine, Animal Resources & Biosecurity (COVAB), Makerere University, Uganda; Stephen
Balinandi, Uganda Virus Research Institute, Uganda; Mikael Berg, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Sweden; Erik Bongcam Rudloff, SLU, Sweden; Erika Chenais, National Veterinary Institute, SVA, Sweden; Lidia Chitimia-Dobler, German Center of Infection Research (DZIF) Partner Munich,
Germany; Klara Fischer, SLU, Sweden; Grandi Giulio, SLU, Sweden; Ingrid Hansson, SLU, Sweden; Juliette Hayer, SLU, Sweden; John Pettersson, National Veterinary Institute, SVA, Sweden; Maja Malmberg, SLU, Sweden
PANEL 07.1
Water Management for Food Production in an Era of Changing
Development Agendas
Chair: Jennie Barron and Abraham Joel
Location: SA506 (1A)
Soil and water conservation practices under changing land use conditions -
experience and evidence from southern Mali. Birhanu Zemadim Birhanu, International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Mali; Kalifa Traore, Institut d'Economie Rurale (IER); Murali Krishna Gumma, International
Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Mali; Felix Badolo,
International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Mali; Ramadjita Tabo, International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Mali; Anthony Michael Whitbread, International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Mali
Securing Water for Food in Changing Landscapes: the case of small water infrastructures in the Sudano-sahelian region of West Africa. Olufunke Cofie, International Water Management Institute; Jennie Barron, International Water Management Institute, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences; Meredith
Giordano, International Water Management Institute
Improving water productivity at water user group level through information sharing on irrigation scheduling. Desalegn Tegegne Mengistu, International
Water Management Institute; Amare Haileslassie, International Water Management Institute; Petra Schemitter, International Water Management Institute; Seifu
Tilahun, Bahir Dar Institute of Technology, Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia; Lisa-Marie Rebelo, International Water Management Institute; Bantamlak Taye, Bahir
Dar Institute of Technology, Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia; Habtamu Desalegn, Bahir Dar Institute of Technology, Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia
30
PANEL 08
Urban Violence: Causes, Consequences and Characteristics
Chair: Kristine Höglund and Emma Elfversson
Location: SA403 (1A)
Drivers and manifestations of urban violence in Nairobi, Kenya. Kristine
Höglund and Emma Elfversson, Uppsala University, Sweden
Towards a theoretical understanding of urban violence. Ivan Gusic and Annika Björkdahl. Lund University, Sweden
Repertoires of Violence: Disaggregating Urban Rioting from Terrorist Attacks
on the City. Luuk Slooter, Utrecht University, Netherlands
PANEL 10.1
Towards an Understanding of how Result Measurements and
Management Hinder or Support Aid Delivery
Chair: Janet Vähämäki, Susanna Alexius and Tiina Pasanen Location: SA203 (1A)
Effects of obsessive results measuring in civil society support – some
reflections from a former broker of aid. Kajsa Johansson, Linnaeus University, Sweden
How to encourage learning and adaptation in development cooperation?
Rebecka Kitzing Ivarsson, Sida, Sweden; Pontus Modéer, Rightshouse
Towards an organizational theory on ‘obsessive measurement disorder’: A
comparative study on how intermediary organizations translate control requirements on aid. Janet Vähämäki and Susanna Alexius, SCORE, Sweden
Between rhetoric and reality: Tracing interactions between results-based management handbooks and project practice. Lena Gutheil, Rhine-Waal University of Applied Sciences, Germany, Radboud University, Netherlands
Measuring results in research cooperation — Learnings, drawbacks and the way forward. Rebecca Andersson and Peter Sundin, Uppsala University, Sweden
PANEL 12
Exporting Nordic Goodness: Critical Perspectives on the
Humanitarian Superpowers
Chair: Johan Karlsson Schaffer Location: SA404 (1A)
Of local stewards and superheroes. Norway's REDD+ governance and its educational powers. Franziska Müller, University of Kassel, Germany
31
A model to follow or an exchange between equals – promoting a Nordic educational system as a means to development in the 1960s. Kjersti Brathagen,
University College of Southeast Norway, Norway
The forgotten revolution: Exporting the Swedish model of democratic transition. Johan Karlsson Schaffer, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Oil for Development and Development for Oil? A Norwegian Aid Programme as Chiasmus. Kristian Bjørkdahl, University of Oslo, Norway
PANEL 16.2
Development and Gender: Present Perspectives and New
Frontiers Chair: Edme Dominguez R and Hauwa Mahdi Location: SA305 (1A)
Trade/development and gender: the case of the Modernization of the Global Agreement between the EU and Mexico from a gender perspective. Edme Dominguez R, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Exploiting Sub-Sahara Africa’s children: Sexual Abuse, Global Humanitarian Workers and Implications for Development Policy. Anthony Sopuruchi Anih, Åbo Akademi University Vasa, Finland
Coffee cooperatives and Women Employment in Rwanda’s rural areas. Bititi Gisaro, University of Rwanda
Microfinance and Self-Development of Women in Tanzania. Aviva Shemesh,
Ben Gurion University, Israel
PANEL 18
Development, Right Wing Populism and State Violence Chair: Swati Parashar
Location: SA527 (1A)
Urban Neighbourhood Associations and the (re)making of Political
Community in Delhi. Aditya Mohanty, University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom
Right wing populists and development policies. Wolfgang Muno, University of Mainz, Germany
(Un)Doing Development the Indigenous Way: A case study from Jharkhand,
India. ANJU OSEEMA MARIA TOPPO, ST. XAVIER'S COLLEGE,RANCHI, INDIA
32
PANEL 22.1
Ownership in a Changing World of Development Cooperation
Chair: Malin Hasselskog and Niels Keijzer
Location: SA303 (1A)
Foreign Aid, the Mining Sector and Democratic Ownership: The Case of
Canadian Assistance to Peru. Stephen Brown, University of Ottawa, Canada
The Ownership Paradox: Continuity and Change. Isabell Schierenbeck and Malin Hasselskog, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Bilateral Development Cooperation at the ownership-partnership nexus:
lessons from the Canadian experience. David Ross Black, Dalhousie University, Canada
PANEL 24.1
New Frontiers in Land and Resource Tenure Research Chair: Margareta Espling Location: SA419 (1A)
Welcome and Introduction. Robin Biddulph
Why social forestry and for whom? A comparative review of Indonesia and Vietnam. Grace Y. Wong, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden; Moira
Moeliono, Center for International Forestry Research, Indonesia; Thu Thuy Pham, Center for International Forestry Research, Vietnam; Maria Brockhaus, University
of Helsinki, Finland; Indah Waty Bong, Center for International Forestry Research, Indonesia
Anticipating erasure: land and territory in the borderlands of the Borneo highlands. Bart Klem, University of Melbourne, Australia
The shifting sands of land governance in peri-urban Mangaluru, India:
Fluctuating land as an ‘informality machine’ reinforcing rapid coastal
transformations. Alin Kadfak, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Patrik Oskarsson, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Land Use Planning in a Community Lands context. Are flexibility and
negotiability possible? Robin Biddulph, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
33
PANEL 26
Integrated Approaches to SDG Implementation - What Does it
Really Mean? Chair: Karina Barquet Location: SA127 (1A)
Synergies and trade-offs among the Sustainable Development Goals: a systematic study. Prajal Pradhan, Luis Costa, Diego Rybski and Jürgen Kropp, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Germany
A holistic framework for inclusive feasibility studies: from top-down to
bottom-up. Marie Ingrid Herman, Casibeans, Belgium; Thi Minh Thai, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Tools and methods for analyzing food systems. Kavengi Kitonga, International
Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, Kenya Harnessing insights from social-ecological systems research for monitoring
sustainable development. Odirilwe Selomane, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden, Natural Resources and Environment, Council for Scientific and Industrial
Research, South Africa; Belinda Reyers, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden; Reinette Biggs, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden, Centre for Complex
Systems in Transition, Stellenbosch University, South Africa; Maike Hamann, Institute on the Environment, University of Minnesota, USA
Partnerships for child health: how can we best capitalize on the links between the sustainable development goals. Tobias Alfvén, Department of Public Health Sciences, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden, Sachs’ Children and Youth Hospital,
Sweden, Swedish Institute for Global Health Transformation (SIGHT), Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Sweden; Daniel Helldén, Department of Public Health Sciences, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden, Swedish Institute for Global Health Transformation (SIGHT), Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Sweden; Helena
Nordenstedt, Department of Public Health Sciences, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden,
Swedish Institute for Global Health Transformation (SIGHT), Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Sweden; Johan Dahlstrand, Swedish Institute for Global Health Transformation (SIGHT), Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Sweden;
Måns Nilsson, Stockholm Environment Institute, Sweden, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
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PANEL 29
The Opportunities and Challenges for Aquaculture to act as
Catalyst for Blue Growth and Food Security Location: SA505 (1A) Chair: Anna Godhe and Per Knutsson
How suitable is the mud crab Scylla serrata as a sustainable livelihood
resource in south-west India? Elina Apine, Plymouth University, United Kingdom; Lynda Rodwell, Plymouth University, United Kingdom; Lucy M. Turner, Plymouth University, United Kingdom; Ramachandra Bhatta, College of
Fisheries, Mangalore, India
Regulatory System and Governance of Shrimp Aquaculture in India. Rashmi Narayana, T A Pai Management Institute, Manipal, India; Ramachandra Bhatta, Indian Council of Agricultural Research; Per Knutsson, University of Gothenburg,
Sweden
Implications of projected climate change conditions for producers and consumers of marine bivalves in southwest India. Lucy M Turner, Plymouth University, UK, Department of Marine Sciences, Gothenburg University, Sweden;
Girisha S K., Karnataka Veterinary Animal and Fisheries Sciences University,
College of Fisheries, Mangalore, India; Ashwin Rai, Karnataka Veterinary Animal and Fisheries Sciences University, College of Fisheries, Mangalore, India; M N. Venugopal, Karnataka Veterinary Animal and Fisheries Sciences University,
College of Fisheries, Mangalore, India; Andrew D Turner, Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (CEFAS), UK; Christian Alsterberg,
Department of Marine Sciences, Gothenburg University, Sweden, Department of Biology, Lund University, Sweden; Jonathan N Havenhand, Department of Marine
Sciences, Gothenburg University, Sweden; Per Knutsson, School of Global Studies, Gothenburg University, Sweden; Ramachandra Bhatta, Karnataka Veterinary Animal and Fisheries Sciences University, College of Fisheries,
Mangalore, India, Alin Kadfak, School of Global Studies, Gothenburg University,
Sweden, Indrani Karunasagar, Nitte University, Mangalore, India; Anna Godhe, Department of Marine Sciences, Gothenburg University, Sweden
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PANEL 33
Rethinking Development and Land in the Context of the Paris
Agreement on Climate Change Chair: Lennart Olsson Location: SA325 (1A)
Rethinking Development amidst Renewable Energy Transition Conflicts in the Global South: The case of India and China. Denise Fernandes, University of Colorado, Boulder, United States of America
The land dimension in large-scale land investments. Genesis T. Yengoh, Lund
University Centre for Sustainability Studies - LUCSUS, Sweden
The role of land use and forestry in Nationally Determined Contributions: over-all strategies and case examples. Madelene Ostwald, Chalmers university of
technology, Sweden; Vilhelm Verendel, Chalmers university of technology, Sweden; Arild Angelsen, Norwegian University of Life Sceinces, Norway; N.H.
Ravindranath, Indian Institute of Science, India
PANEL 38.2
Privitization and Marketization of Development Aid - New
Trends? New Challenges? Chair: Camille Pellerin and Maria Eriksson Baaz Location: SA410 (1A)
Promoting Private Sector for Development: The Rise of Blended Finance in
EU Aid Architecture. Luis Mah, Lisbon School of Economics & Management, Portugal
Paradigm Shift in Foreign Aid and Development Cooperation: The Case of China’s Agricultural Aid-Trade-Investment in Africa. Yuezhou Yang, London
School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
Withdrawing International Donors and Flooding Domestic Capital: a case study of financing change in a Chinese NGO. Hailing ZHAO, University of East
Anglia, China
Investigating resilient development narratives in a public-private partnership for large-scale agro-investment in Tanzania. Linda Engström, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Sweden
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PANEL 40.2
The Opportunities and Challenges in Urban and Peri-Urban
Agriculture and the Role for Science-Based Policies and Practices Location: SA407 (1A) Chair: Johanna Bergman Lodin and Ulf Magnusson
Gendered food production and consumption patterns among urban
households in Ghana’s intermediate sized cities. Hayford Ayerakwa, University of Ghana; Magnus Jirstrom, Lund University, Sweden; Agnes Andersson Djurfeldt, Lund University, Sweden
Ecosystem-based Adaptation for Building Resilience in Peri-urban Coastal
Community in Bangladesh. Nuzhat Fatema, Khulna University, Bangladesh; Md Mustafa Saroar, Khulna University of Engineering & Technology, Bangladesh
Are livestock in the city special? Ulf Magnusson, Swedish University of
Agricultural Sciences Global, Sweden
‘Entrepreneurship as empowerment? Gendered opportunities and challenges in entrepreneurial urban and peri-urban agriculture in Tanzania.’ Johanna Bergman Lodin, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden
PANEL 42
Rethinking Development Research: Object and Subjects in
Development Studies Chair: Julia Schöneberg and Henning Melber
Location: SA406 (1A)
Rule of Law Development Intermediaries in Myanmar’s Transition. Kristina
Anna Isabella Simion, Australian National University, Australia Decolonising the Interview - Prospects and Challenges. Esther Kronsbein,
University of Kassel, Germany
'Development and Culture' vs 'Development as Culture'. Juan Telleria,
University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU, Spain
Reverse innovation: an opportunity to combat asymmetric ignorance in the international development architecture? Hamdi Issa, Ara Darzi and Matthew Harris, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
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PANEL 45.1
Religion and Development - What are the Links? Why Should
We Care? Chair: Robert Odén and Johan Gärde Location: SA219 (1A)
Doing research on SRHR in Theology using participatory methodologies and
the contributions for rethinking development in the Latin American context. André Sidnei Musskopf, Faculdades EST, Brazil
Pastor at war – a qualitative interview study in Democratic republic of Congo.
Elias Berg, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Water carved out the mountains. Policy communication of Engaged Buddhists related to international development cooperation. Kristin Olson, Sida, Sweden
Religious Aspects of Development in Modern Russian Politics. Alla Glincikova,
MSPU, Russian Federation
The ‘we-less I’ and other tendencies that challenge equal partnerhips. Moira von Wright, Ersta Sköndal Bräcke University College, Sweden
PANEL 49
SAFEResearch
Chair: Isabell Schiererbeck
Location: SA220 (1A)
SAFEResearch in the Social Sciences: A Systematic Handbook for Human and Digital Security. Isabell Schiererbeck, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Doing fieldwork in war zones of the Middle East; safety, intuition and ethics. Joshka Wessels, Lund University, Sweden
Exploring the backstage: Methodological and ethical issues surrounding the role of local research brokers in inseure zones. Maria Eriksson Baaz, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Research Brokers, Researcher Identities and Affective Performances: The Insider/Outsider Conundrum. Swati Parashar, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
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PANEL 50
Searching for Another Development through Nonviolence and
Communication
Chair: Ingvar Rönnbäck
Location: SA315 (1A)
Can we transform the world towards Another Development through nonviolence and communication? What is the space for such approaches in the framework of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development? What is the necessities, independent of the
potentials in the new development agenda? These are the questions discussed in this panel, organized by Another Development Foundation and Hard Rain Project.
Participants: Ingvar Rönnbäck, Another Development Foundation, Founder and chair of the board
Dag Jonzon – Hard Rain Project, Director Kristina Sehlin-Macneil, Vartooe, Umeå University, Ph.D
Peter Söderström, Another Development Foundation, Co-founder and member of the board, Senior Advisor on Gender Equality
23 August 11.00 -12.30
PANEL 07.2
Water Management for Food Production in an Era of Changing
Development Agendas Chair: Jennie Barron and Abraham Joel Location: SA506 (1A)
The role of farmer-friendly soil and moisture monitoring tools: the impact of reduced irrigation on system dynamics in Zimbabwe. Martin Philani Moyo, International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT),
Zimbabwe; Andre van Rooyen, International Crops Research Institute for the
Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), Zimbabwe; Thabani Dube, International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), Zimbabwe; Mthulisi Maya, International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics
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(ICRISAT), Zimbabwe; Henning Bjornlund, University of South Australia; Jamie
Pittock, Australian National University; Richard Stirzaker, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Australia
Challenge to assess the impact of future extreme climatic events on hydrology and agriculture in Africa. Youen Grusson, Eric Gustafsson, Elina Svedlberg, Abraham Joel and Ingrid Wesström, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,
Sweden
Water requirements for feeding the African population in 2030 under a changing climate. Fernando Jaramillo, Ingo Fetzer, Luigi Piemontese, Lars Berg, Malin Falkenmark and Johan Rockström, Stockholm University, Sweden
‘Meat free Mondays’ - a viable solution to save water resources in the global ‘South’? Mats Lannerstad, Independent consultant, Sweden; Jens Heinke, PIK, Potsdam, Germany
PANEL 10.2
Towards an Understanding of How Result Measurements and
Management Hinder or Support Aid Delivery
Chair: Janet Vähämäki, Susanna Alexius and Tiina Pasanen Location: SA203 (1A)
Counting women to fulfil donor demands for legitimacy in Liberia. Anja Kaarina Onali, University of Helsinki, Finland
Hard Results, Shifting Sands: changing results management technologies and governance rationalities. Brendan S Whitty, University of East Anglia, United
Kingdom
Measurement and learning in multi-stakeholder partnerships. Tiina Pasanen, Overseas Development Institute (ODI), United Kingdom
Learning in Focus, Experiences from Support Services in Planning, Monitoring and Measuring Results. Anna Liljelund Hedqvist and Jessica
Rothman, NIRAS Sweden
PANEL 17
Critical Approaches to Compact Cities and Informal Settlements
in an Urban World Chair: María José Zapata Campos and Marie Thynell Location: SA404 (1A)
Regulatory considerations for Non-Motorized Transport in African megacities: A case study of Nairobi. Edna Ama Odhiambo, University of Nairobi, Kenya
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Controlling Urban Informality: How Street Vendors and Rickshaw Drivers Access Public Space. Ana Maria Vargas, Swedish International Centre for Local
Democracy, Sweden
Citizen-driven strategies in global South cities’ informal settlements. Critical narratives from Buenos Aires, Havana and Kisumu. María José Zapata Campos, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Jaan-Henrik Kain, Chalmers
University of Technology, Sweden; Michael Oloko, JOOUST University, Kenya; Jenny Stenberg, Chalmers University of Technology Sweden; Patrik Zapata, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Recycling networks. Grassroots initiatives tackling climate, environmental
and poverty challenges in informal settlements. Charles Goodluck, University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania; Jutta Gutberlet, University of Victoria, Canada, Federal University of the ABC Region in São Paulo, Brazil; Jaan-Henrik Kain, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden; Michael O Oloko, Jaramogi Oginga Odinga
University of Science and Technology Kisumu, Kenya; Jessica Pérez Reynosa,
University of Central America, Nicaragua; Patrik Zapata, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; María José, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Sebastían Carenzo, Universidad Nacional de Quilmes, Argentina
PANEL 20
Peacebuilding Amidst Violence Chair: Joakim Öjendal, Manuela Nilsson and Jan Bachmann Location: SA127 (1A)
One step forward-two backward in every five years: electoral violence and
peacebuilding in Kenya. Michael Omondi Owiso, Maseno University/Aalborg University, Denmark
Contesting peace: Reflections on the conflict and violence in Sri Lanka's postwar transition. Bart Klem, University of Melbourne, Australia
Peaceful Conflict Resolution Model as Development Discourse in Nepal. Babita Khadka and Rajib Timalsina, Tribhuvan University, Nepal
Building peace amidst violence: Colombia's illegal drug cultivation
substitution program and the security-development nexus. Manuela Nilsson,
Linneuniversitetet, Sweden
Countering Buddhist Radicalization: Emerging Local Peace Movements in Burma and Sri Lanka. Camilla Orjuela, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
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PANEL 21
Power, Resistance and Social Change Chair: Mona Lilja (discussants: Minoo Koefoed and Michael Schulz)
Location: SA408 (1A)
Diversification and unpredictability hampering peasants' collective action in
Mozambique . Kajsa Johansson, Linnaeus University, Sweden Discourses of Gendered Resistance. Michelle Dyer, Stockholm University,
Sweden Knowledge, resistance and ontological disobedience. Anders Burman, University
of Gothenburg, Sweden Just Another Battleground: Resisting Courtroom Historiography in the
Extraordinary Chamber in the Courts of Cambodia. Mikael Baaz, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Filip Strandberg Hassellind, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
PANEL 22.2
Ownership in a Changing World of Development Cooperation Chair: Malin Hasselskog and Niels Keijzer Location: SA303 (1A)
Ownership in a ‘post-aid effectiveness’ world? Evidence from two post-
conflict states. Niels Keijzer, German Development Institute, Germany What does national ownership do to local participation? Indications from
Cambodia, Rwanda and Zambia. Malin Hasselskog, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
South-South Partnerships: Decentering Donors with Innovative Program Modalities. Molly den Heyer, Romeo Dallaire Child Soldiers Initiative, Canada
Concluding Reflections. Lennart Wohlgemuth, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
PANEL 24.2
New Frontiers in Land and Resource Tenure Research Chair: Robin Biddulph Location: SA419 (1A)
Land division, dispossession and fencing: The political ecology of inclusion
and exclusion in wildlife conservation in Maasai Mara, Kenya. Teklehaymanot
Geremeskel Weldemichel, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
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The Mozambican Community-based Land Tenure Model - experiences from Nampula province. Margareta Espling, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Open discussion: New Frontiers in Tenure Research. Introduction by Lasse Krantz and Marie Stenseke
PANEL 27.3
External Influence over Regional Organizations and Regionalism Chair: Fredrik Söderbaum and Sören Stapel Location: Antarktis (W)
EUropean influence over regional organizations in Africa: The case of external funding. Sören Stapel, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Fredrik Söderbaum, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
The Benefit of Regionalism for Fragile Member States: Do external Actors
matter? Johannes Muntschick, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Germany
How do Regional Organizations Influence the Institutional Design of Each Other? Mariel Reiss, Philipps-University Marburg, Germany
European Support to the Integration Process in the East African Community. Harrison Kalunga Mwilima, Research-Consulting-Stakeholders Management,
Germany
PANEL 28
Electoral Integrity in a Variety of Regimes Chair: Elin Bjarnegård and Valeriya Mechkova Location: SA527 (1A)
Engendering Electoral Authoritarianism. Elin Bjarnegård and Pär Zetterberg, Uppsala University, Sweden
Pens and Swords: Explaining Rebel Education in Côte d'Ivoire. Sebastian van Baalen, Uppsala University, Sweden
Media’s credibility on Election Coverage. Nayan Jyoti Nath, Sangeeta Sharma,
Birla Institute of Technology and Sciences, Pilani, India
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PANEL 31
The Global South as Laboratory? The Politics of Experimentation
and Intervention in Contemporary Global Development Chair: Adam Fejerskov Location: SA305 (1A)
Shaping Technology for Sustainable Development: A Sanitation-Fertilizer
solution for the Global South. Suvi Kokko and Klara Fischer, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden
Haiti as a laboratory for NGO and UN intervention. Andrea Steinke, Freie
Universität Berlin, Germany
PANEL 37
Reflecting on the Role of Local Context and Collaboration in
Transdisciplinary Development Research Chair: Fiona Louise Lambe Location: SA407 (1A)
A small-scale fisheries academy to promote co-production of knowledge in the
face of globalised markets . Aliou Sall, Mundus maris, Senegal; Cornelia E. Nauen, Mundus maris, Belgium
Traditional ecological knowledge and local hunting practices in the Western
Amazon – Implications for scientific inquiry and the governance of tropical forests. Torsten Krause, Lund University, Sweden
Transdisciplinary challenges in the process of co-producing transformation research with small-scale fishers. Study cases: Chile and Poland. Gloria L.
Gallardo Fernández and Fred Saunders, Södertörn University, Sweden Using index insurance to avoid poverty traps amongst agricultural
smallholders in low-income countries. Matthew Osborne, Stockholm Environment Institute, Sweden; Naira Dehmel, University of East Anglia,
Norwich, UK; Arjan Verschoor, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK Collaboration between local and scientific communities for co-production of
knowledge for climate change adaptation in Peru. Nella Canales, Stockholm
Environment Institute (SEI), Sweden
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PANEL 41
Rethinking Water and Sanitation Services - Can We Balance
Immediate and Future Needs? Chair: Sarah Dickin, Sara Gabrielsson, Kim Andersson and Helfrid M.A. Schulte-Herbruggen Location: SA410 (1A)
Coping with water supply scarcity in rural communities in the Dry Central
American corridor: cost-benefit analysis to improve the water supply in the
Maraxco community, Chiquimula, Guatemala. Nestor Javier Sagui Gomez,
Roger Madrigal and Silvia Estigarribia, Tropical Agricultural Research and Higher Education Center, Paraguay
Local Water Supply and Sanitation - Problems and Solutions. Karl Gunnar
Jacks, Royal Inst of Technology (KTH), Sweden; Sanata Traoré, Université de
Bakamo, Mali; Kazi Matin Ahmed, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh Exploring how sustainable sanitation contributes to achieving the Paris
Agreement goals. Sarah Dickin, Stockholm Environment Institute, Sweden Adopting a resilience lens in managing decentralised water, sanitation and
hygiene systems. Claudius Mpofu, Ecoloop, Sweden Assessing the importance of reliable and safe water and sanitation at the
household level for escaping the gender WASH trap in rural Tanzania. Sara Gabrielsson, Lund University, Sweden
Estimating potential energy recovery and GHG mitigation from organic waste
management in Chia, Colombia. Jairo Mosquera, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
PANEL 45.2
Religion and Development - What are the links? Why should we
care? Chair: Robert Odén and Johan Gärde Location: SA219 (1A)
Spatial (in)justice, social housing and healing urban fractures: the role of faith
communities in South African cities. Stephan DeBeer, University of Pretoria
Religious Extremism as a major hurdle to achieve the Sustainable
Development Goals – faith as a factor in policy-making and implementation.
Johan Gärde, Ersta Sköndal Bräcke University College, Sweden
Beyond ‘Marxism, Missionaries and Medicine’, the case of a developed welfare society (Kerala) in the developing nation of India. Sabu Thomas and Sonny Jose, Loyola College of Social Sciences, Kerala, India
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In defense of Health, Life, and Rights: Interdiscursivity of religious discourse on Family Planning in Tanzania. Richard Faustine Sambaiga, University of Dar
es Salaam, Tanzania
A Rights-Based Approach in a Religious World. Linnea Lundgren, Ersta Skondal Bracke University, Sweden
PANEL 47
‘We are what we eat’: comparative perspectives on urban food
supply, security and value chains Chair: David Simon and Stephen G. Agong Location: SA325 (A)
Food systems sustainability – for whom and by whom? – An examination of different ‘food system change’ viewpoints. Gunilla Almered Olsson, University
of Gothenburg, Sweden; Gareth Haysom, African Centre for Cities; Mirek Dymitrow, Chalmers University, Sweden; Kristina Fermskog, Business Region
Göteborg/Stadslandet; Maria Nyström, Chalmers University, Sweden; Paul Opiyo, University of Nairobi, Kenya; Charlie Spring, University of Sheffield; Nick Taylor
Buck, University of Sheffield; Stephen G. Agong9, Jaramogi Oginga Odinga
University of Science and Technology
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Practical information Registration and reception desk: The registration and reception desk will open from 8.30 the 22nd of August at Wallenberg Lobby (W), see map for
further instructions.
Panel sessions: Please arrive in time for each session – access will be on a first come first served basis. Please wear your conference batch at all times, as this will be required to access the venues.
Coffee breaks: Coffee will be served at different stations in houses 1A (Floor 1 and 2) and W (Wallenberg Lobby) depending on where the panels take place. Lunch: Pre-paid participants will have lunch at restaurant Lyktan (W). Others may buy food in the nearby area of the School of Global Studies, for
example at Gyllene Prag (Eastern European food), Kathmandu (Nepalese food), Le Pain Francais (French food), Beirut House (Lebanese food), Sushi Garden (Sushi), Taverna Mykonos (Greek food). Conference dinner: 22 August, 19.00-22.00, Restaurant Lyktan (W). Note: Only pre-paid participants can participate.
To withdraw money: Closest ATM may be found on Brunnsgatan 1, which can be find in the attached map of Gothenburg. Taxi and public transport: To use the bus or tramcar, you may either download the app ‘Västtrafik To Go’ to buy your tickets online or pay by
card on the tramcar. At the Central Station (or in the app) you can buy a 3-days unlimited travel in Gothenburg for 190 Swedish crones (SEK). Wallenberg Conference Centre can be reached by tramcar number 6, 7, 8, 13 from the station Göteborg Medicinaregatan from where it is a 10-minute walk. Annedalseminariet at the School of Global Studies can be reached by tramcar 1, 2 and 6 from station Göteborg Linnéplatsen. Furthermore, you
will find a shortcut between Wallenberg and Annedalsseminaret as the blue dots indicate on the map on next page. Contact: In case of questions call Jenny Fristrand, +46 (0)709 3003 70 and Gustav Aldén Rudd +46 (0)702 3099 47. In case of Emergency call 112.
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Map of Wallenberg Conference Centre (W) and the School of
Global Studies (1A)
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