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The Global Land Tool Network (GLTN) contributes to the
implementation of pro poor land policies to achieve
secure land rights for all. Read more...

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February 4th, 2012

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Moderators

Information about moderators

The moderators are independent academics or thinkers and their views do not necessarily reflect the views of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area, or of its authorities, or concerning delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries, or regarding its economic system or degree of development. The analysis, conclusions and recommendations made by the moderators or by any participants do not necessarily reflect the views of the Secretariat of the United Nations, the United Nations Human Settlements Programme, the Governing Council of the United Nations Human Settlements Programme or its Member States.  

 

Diane Dumashie

Diane A Dumashie is FIG Chairman of Commission 8 (Spatial planning and development) Her aim is to lead on communication, collaboration and exchange of ideas amongst Built Environment Professionals through the FIG global member associations.  At the UK national level Diane’s position of Chair of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors leads the UK delegation to FIG Council.

She holds a Doctorate in Land policy, planning and Integrated Coastal Area Management from the University of Wales as well as Land & Property Management BSC degree from the University for Central England. She is a Fellow of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors and a full member of the Environment Society (EnvSoc).

With over 25 years working at senior director level Diane has led many large-and complex development projects working in the public, private commercial and NGO sectors across a wide range of Urban business sectors, coastal industry (land and marine based) and affordable housing she has gained an in-depth and diverse knowledge of commerce with expertise across all property types.  As project lead her emphasise is on multi- disciplinary project teams.

Ten years ago, Diane founded her own consultancy practice, Dumashie LTD, in order to utilise her long experience of trouble-shooting, path-smoothing and adding value to complex developments, I also specialise in difficult areas such as coastal areas, but also redundant urban/ industrialised land. This compliments her work in Informal settlements in sub- Saharan Africa. 

The focus of Diane’s work is increasingly orientated to community issues, including responsibilities to plan and facilitate stakeholder partication workshops, for managing and delivering urban and rural based economic and regeneration projects within the UK and Overseas, including East and Southern Africa. 

She has many International interests, both research and consultancy, and is committed to assisting third world regeneration and was over the period 2004- 06 Chairperson for Commission 8 (Spatial Planning and Development) for the International Federation of Surveyors (FIG), and is again elected to the Chair 2008 - 2010. 

Birte Scholz

Ms Birte Scholz is the Global Land and Housing Campaign Coordinator for the Huairou Commission, a coalition of networks dedicated to supporting and enhancing the work of grassroots women in human settlements.

Previously, Birte was the Women and Housing Rights Programme Coordinator at COHRE, the Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions, a Geneva-based human rights NGO. She acted as the COHRE Ghana Programme manager and focal point for the Women’s Land Link Africa (WLLA) Initiative, a collaborative project on strengthening grassroots women’s work on land in Africa.

Birte is dedicated to the significance of human rights and the change they can bring when respected and protected, and is dedicated to ensuring human rights norms and standards reach the ground by way of enhancing grassroots efforts and promoting programmes and policies which make communities, and in particular women, the focus in design and implementation. Birte has been active in the conception, development and implementation of a variety of innovative activities, designed to enhance and strengthen the realization of human rights for women, in particular at the grassroots level. She has pushed the agenda on housing and land rights for women, as well as inheritance rights - all vital at grassroots level and gaining increasing attention at national, regional and international levels.

Having spent three years in Geneva working with the various human rights mechanisms, Birte has a keen understanding of the UN and its machinery. From 2005-2007, Birte worked in Ghana, West Africa, and knows the complexities of issues communities face and the processes they employ when claiming their land and housing rights.

Birte is a licensed human rights lawyer, and has worked in private litigation as well as public service. Birte received her Juris Doctorate with a public interest law emphasis from the University of San Francisco School of Law and received degrees in Psychology and Political Science from the University of California, Los Angeles, USA.

Jude Wallace

Jude is a senior research fellow at the Centre for Spatial Data Infrastructures and Land Administration at the Department of Geomatics. Research includes modern land administration systems for complex property markets, social and rural land tenures systems, and modelling of systems and transactions for national coherency.  Her legal practice is in land law and legal policy for governments, including World Bank projects (Indonesia) and AusAid projects (East Timor, Vietnam).

Jude is involved in developing policy and infrastructure in the following areas: land markets, formal and social tenures, standardization of infrastructure and transactions, modeling of systems, land administration, parcellation, mining, and public land management. As a consultant, Jude specializes in property and development law, legal policy advice, technology and dispute resolution.  Her legal practice areas are property and planning law, and land investment for the poor.  She has written extensively for the public and community legal services particularly about tenancy law, buying and selling real estate, and writing in Plain English.

As Deputy Chairperson of the Law Reform Commission of Victoria, Jude chaired and worked on a variety of references including Land Law Reform, Equal Opportunity for Women and Disabled People, Child Sex Abuse, Rape Law Reform, Access to Justice, Mining Law, Occupational Regulation and Product Liability.

Jude is a long standing and active member of Liberty Victoria, the Victorian Council for Civil Liberties, and was its President in 1997 and 1998. She maintains a life-long professional interest in native title and indigenous rights.  Her contribution to poverty law and human rights was acknowledged by her inclusion in the Victorian Honour Roll of Women Shaping the Nation, for the Centenary of Australian Federation in 2001.

Siraj Sait

Siraj Sait is a Senior Lecturer at the University of East London where he heads the Human Rights and Islamic and Middle East Studies postgraduate programmes. His areas of expertise are human rights, gender and land/housing, refugee and post-conflict studies and Islamic law. A lawyer by training, he has held served several key posts such as State Prosecutor on Human Rights in India, and has been closely associated with several grassroots campaigns and NGOs, as a consultant for Minority Rights Group International and as a trustee of the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative. He has been a consultant to UNHCR, UNICEF and recently served as human settlements officer, Land Tenure and Property Administration Section, Shelter Branch at the UN-HABITAT, he was also the gender officer for the Global Land Tool Network (GLTN) responsible for the Mechanism on Gendering Land Tools. He was the organiser of the Round Table on Gendering Tools at the World Urban Forum (Vancouver, June 2006). He is a member of several research institutions such as the Refugee Research Centre and the Centre on Human Rights in Conflict. He has published widely in the fields of human rights, gender issues and Islamic studies. His recent publications include Land, Law & Islam: Property and Human Rights in the Muslim World (Zed: 2006) (with H Lim) and the Policy Makers Guide to Women’s Land, Property and Housing Rights (2006). 

Overall coordination by GLTN Secretariat

The e-forum discussion is coordinated by Ms. Åsa Jonsson, Human Settlements Officer, UN-HABITAT, who is responsible for the GLTN gender component at the GLTN Secretariat.