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Resettlement Instruments

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Title: Resettlement Instruments


1
Involuntary Resettlement OPERATIONAL POLICY 0P
4.12 Resettlement Instruments Afshan Khawaja,
OPCQC Zagreb, May 2009
2
Overview
  • Social assessment
  • Impacts that trigger OP 4.12
  • Required mitigation measures
  • Who is eligible
  • Key issues
  • Replacement value, livelihood restoration,
    eligibility
  • Consultation
  • Resettlement instruments
  • Borrower and Bank responsibilities
  • Supervision, completion and beyond

3
Social AssessmentIdentification of Social
Impacts and Risks
  • Good practice for the borrower to undertake a
    social assessment to
  • Identify the nature and magnitude of social
    impacts
  • Identify indirect social and economic impacts
  • Define and implement measures to mitigate these
    impacts, especially on poor and vulnerable groups
  • Identify project activities that may give rise to
    involuntary resettlement
  • Economic and social impacts that do not result
    directly from land taking can pose significant
    social risks if not mitigated and managed
    properly

4
Core Elements of Social Assessment
  • Social diversity and gender
  • Stakeholder analysis
  • Social risks and mitigation
  • Participation

5
Impacts that Trigger OP 4.12
  • Direct economic and social impacts that both
    result from Bank-assisted projects, and are
    caused by the involuntary taking of land
    resulting from
  • Loss of assets or access to assets
  • Loss of shelter or relocation
  • Loss of income sources or means of livelihood
    (whether or not the affected persons must move to
    another location)
  • Restriction of access to legally designated parks
    and protected areas that result in adverse
    impacts on the livelihoods of affected persons

6
Liberia Infrastructure and Resettlement Challenge
7
Required Resettlement Measures
  • To inform displaced persons about their options
    and rights pertaining to resettlement
  • Provide them technically and economically
    feasible resettlement alternatives

8
Required Resettlement Measures
  • To provide prompt and effective compensation at
    full replacement cost for losses of assets
    attributable directly to the project
  • Provide assistance during relocation
  • To provide with residential houses, or housing
    sites, or as required agricultural sites, at
    least equivalent to the advantages of the old site

9
Required Resettlement Measures LAND VS. CASH
  • Providing land for land is the preferred option
    for people whose livelihoods are land based

10
Required Resettlement Measures
  • Cash compensation may be appropriate when
  • Land taken by the project is a small fraction of
    the affected asset and residual is viable
  • Livelihoods are not land based
  • Cash compensation is the preferred option of
    displaced people and they have the capacity for
    self-resettlement

11
Required Resettlement Measures
  • Offer support after displacement, for a
    transition period, based on a reasonable estimate
    of the time likely to be needed to restore their
    livelihood and standards of living
  • Moving expenses
  • Employment training
  • Income support while awaiting income restoration
  • Develop affordable and accessible grievance
    redress mechanisms

12
Required Resettlement Measures
  • Include the total costs resettlement activities
    in the total costs of the project
  • Link resettlement implementation to project
    timetable (people should be properly compensated
    and assisted prior to displacement

13
Who is Eligible?
  • The borrower carries out a census to identify
    those affected and eligible for assistance
  • Those who have formal legal rights to land
    (compensation)
  • Those who do not have formal legal rights to land
    at the time the census begins but have a claim to
    such land or assets (compensation)
  • Those who have no recognizable legal right or
    claim to the land that they are occupying
    (resettlement assistance)

14
particular attention should be paid to
  • Vulnerable groups
  • below poverty line, landless, elderly, women,
    children, handicapped, single parents, indigenous
    peoples, ethnic minorities

15
Key Policy Application Issues
  • Differences with Countries Practices
  • Replacement cost for lost land and assets
  • Practice undervalued, under-compensated
  • Livelihood restoration
  • Not part of standard practice
  • Eligibility
  • Controversial assistance to people without
    legal claims

16
Replacement Value
  • Impacts
  • Loss of land and other assets
  • Agricultural and non-agricultural land
  • Houses and other structures
  • Assets wells, trees, crops
  • Compensation
  • Full replacement costs (market value of assets
    plus transaction costs, registration and transfer
    taxes)
  • Issues
  • Who determine value?
  • Who pays for it?
  • When is it decided?
  • Practice - undervalued, under-compensated

17
Livelihood Restoration
  • Impacts
  • Loss of income-earning capacity
  • Compensation alone does not guarantee the
    restoration or improvement of living standards
  • Example agricultural land has a market value
    (requires compensation), but it is also the basis
    for livelihood and future earning capacity
    (requires rehabilitation)
  • Issues
  • Not part of standard practice
  • Household may have multiple providers of income
    require intra-household analysis
  • Women have different opportunities for employment
    require gender analysis
  • Vulnerable groups (poor, elderly, ethnic
    minorities) have different opportunities for
    livelihood restoration establish criteria for
    vulnerability

18
Eligibility- Groups Not Protected by National
Land Compensation Law
  • Definition
  • People lacking title to land or structures
  • Squatters (urban) or encroachers (agricultural or
    forest areas)
  • Impacts
  • Squatters in occupation of land before project
    initiation may have invested in structures or
    land improvement
  • Issues
  • OP 4.12 affected people who do not have legal
    title to lands occupied/used by them need to be
    provided with resettlement assistance
  • Controversial no recognized rights
  • When is a squatter not a squatter?
  • Traditional rights where state never legally
    acquired land
  • Local recognition based on taxes defecto
    ownership
  • Promises of land regularization by politicians
  • Inconsistent applications of policies, court
    reversals

19
Loss of livelihood Squatters
20
Consultation about impacts and opportunities
  • Public disclosure
  • Information in local languages
  • Options and choices
  • Explanation of risks and benefits
  • Adequate time to make informed judgments
  • Joint verification of impacts and entitlements
  • Registration and ID cards computerized database

21
Resettlement Instruments
  • Resettlement plan (RAP)
  • When it is possible to determine displacing
    population during project preparation (i.e.
    site-specific resettlement)
  • Abbreviated resettlement plan (ARP)
  • When affected people are not physically displaced
    and less than 10 of their productive assets are
    lost, or fewer than 200 people are displaced
  • Resettlement policy framework (RPF)
  • In a project with multiple subprojects where
    population to be displaced not know during
    project preparation (i.e. linear resettlement
  • Process framework (PF)
  • For projects involving restriction of access to
    legally designated parks and protected areas
    resulting in adverse impacts on the livelihoods
    of affected people

Cartoon by Chris Madden
22
Legal Agreement
  • The resettlement instrument is included in the
    Legal Agreement Between the Bank and the Borrower

23
Content ofResettlement Instruments
24
Resettlement Plan Content (1)
  • Project description and location
  • Potential impacts
  • Components that cause displacement
  • Affected areas and population
  • Alternatives to prevent or minimize displacement
  • Socioeconomic and cultural studies
  • Methodology (including detailed household census
    survey)
  • Results (size and socioeconomic characteristics
    of affected population, systems of labor,
    livelihoods property held and type of tenancy,
    etc.)
  • Impact assessment
  • Magnitude of the expected losses (total, partial)
  • Type of displacement (physical, economic)

25
Resettlement Plan Content (2)
  • Legal framework
  • Relevant legislation (international treaties,
    national constitution, laws related to eminent
    domain and the nature of compensation associated
    with it)
  • Methods of valuing affected assets
  • Timing of payment
  • Mechanisms for dispute resolutions
  • Gaps between local laws covering eminent domain
    and the Bank's policy, and mechanisms to bridge
    such gaps
  • Entitlements to be offered based on type of
    impact, and on socioeconomic and cultural
    characteristics of the population (Entitlement
    Matrix)
  • Eligibility criteria for each entitlement
  • Cut-off date to prevent "rent seeking"
  • Measures to prevent the arrival of new settlers
    in the affected area

26
Resettlement Plan Content (3)
  • Programs
  • Communication, consultation, participation
  • Land acquisition or land replacement
  • Construction or acquisition of new housing,
    business, farms, industries and community
    facilities, public services
  • Income restoration and development of economic
    opportunities
  • Reestablishment of social networks
  • Integration with host population
  • Environmental impacts of the proposed
    resettlement and measures to mitigate them
  • Grievance mechanisms and procedures
  • Organizational responsibilities
  • Budget and financing plan
  • Timetable (linked to underlying project)
  • Monitoring system
  • Evaluation system

27
Resettlement Policy Framework - Content
  • Project description (explanation of displaced
    population)
  • Legal framework (relevant legislation,
    mechanisms)
  • Principles and objectives governing resettlement
    preparation and implementation
  • Eligibility criteria for defining displaced
    persons
  • Description of the implementation process,
    linking resettlement implementation to civil
    works or the events that could cause displacement
  • Procedures to prepare and implement resettlement
    plans
  • Ns (such plans are subject to prior review by the
    Bank before their implementation)
  • Content of resettlement plans
  • Participatory and consultation mechanisms
  • Description of grievance redress mechanisms
  • Institution responsible (resources, capacity and
    measures to strengthen it, if needed)
  • Monitoring system
  • Evaluation system

28
Process Framework - Content
  • Describe participatory process to
  • Prepare and implement project components that may
    cause restriction to access to resources
  • Identify and assess the magnitude of the impacts
  • Establish criteria of eligibility for any
    compensatory measure
  • Choose potential mitigating or compensating
    measures to be provided to affected people
  • Design conflict mechanisms resolution
  • Administrative and legal procedures
  • Monitoring arrangements

29
Responsibilities
  • Borrower
  • Prepare the Resettlement Instrument (Framework or
    Plan)
  • Consult project affected persons
  • Disclose the draft instruments as condition of
    project appraisal
  • Disclose the instrument again after it is
    finalized
  • Implement and monitor the Resettlement Plan
  • Final evaluation of the Plan
  • Bank
  • Provide advice during the preparation of the
    instruments
  • Review and approve the Plan or Framework before
    appraisal
  • Disclose draft instrument at the infoshop
  • Disclose final instrument again at the infoshop
  • Supervise regularly the implementation of the
    Plan
  • Include Resettlement Results in the ICR

30
When it works!
31
Supervision, Completion and Beyond
  • The policy prescribes
  • An early review of implementation
  • Earlier than the mid-term review for the project
  • A project is not considered complete and Bank
    supervision continues until the agreed
    resettlement measures have been implemented
  • A follow up socio-economic survey at project
    completion
  • To assess the extent to which the objectives of
    the resettlement program have been achieved
  • Based on the baseline socioeconomic survey and
    periodic monitoring reports
  • If the assessment reveals that objectives may not
    be realized, the borrower should propose follow
    up measures
  • Bank supervision may continue beyond project
    completion, if considered necessary by the Bank

32
Key Implementation Issues and Challenges
  • Capacity of implementing agency and understanding
    of agreements, rights an d obligations
  • How are impacts addressed?
  • Who is responsible?
  • Who pays for it, with what budget?
  • How is it monitored?
  • How are impacts and results communicated to key
    stakeholders, particularly those affected?
  • If problems arise, how are they dealt with?
  • Consultants frequently prepare poor quality
    reports

33
Summary of Key Issues toAddress Resettlement in
Bank-Supported Projects
  • Policy
  • Agreement with the borrower on applicable
    principles
  • Analysis
  • If potential adverse impacts identify, avoid,
    minimize, mitigate
  • Consultation and disclosure
  • Prior information, documentation of views and
    concerns input to design, feedback
  • Action and mitigation plans
  • Instruments vary by policy and category
  • Framework if direct impact area is unknown
  • Institutional arrangements
  • Responsibilities, budgets, capacity assessment,
    strengthening if needed

34
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