Martina Manara
School of Geography and Planning
Leverhulme Early Career Fellow
Full contact details
School of Geography and Planning
Geography and Planning Building
Winter Street
Sheffield
S3 7ND
- Profile
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Martina holds PhD and MSc degrees in Regional and Urban Planning Studies from the London School of Economics and Political Science (UK), where she studied the implementation of land tenure formalisation policies in Dar es Salaam (Tanzania). Since 2021, she has worked as a Research Officer at the LSE where she is currently an Associate of the Centre for Economic Performance. Here, her joint research evaluates the effects of urban planning and sites-and-services in Tanzania. Martina’s research has been disseminated widely, including with governments and communities. She is a coordinator of the Urbanisation and Development Study Group of the Development Studies Association (UK).
In 2023, she joined the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the University of Sheffield to conduct her research project ‘De facto regulations of informal land: Opening the black box of African cities’ (Leverhulme Award ECF-2022-193). Drawing on interdisciplinary institutional scholarship, this project proposes an innovative analytic framework and empirical methods to study urban informality, with applications in Dar es Salaam (Tanzania), Accra (Ghana) and Nairobi (Kenya). Martina has over 12-months of fieldwork experience and numerous partnerships. This project is developed in collaboration with key stakeholders through a series of workshops and policy impact activities.
- Research interests
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Martina is an interdisciplinary and mixed-methods scholar. Her current research interests include: (1) Measurement of pluralistic and hybrid regulations and their effects (2) Constitution and effects of urban planning regulation (3) Constitution and effects of de-facto land governance (4) State-community co-production of urban public goods (5) Informal land transactions via hybrid market and inheritance regimes
- Publications
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Journal articles
- Unbundling tenure security and demand for property rights: Evidence from urban Tanzania. Urban Studies.
- Institutional work: how lenders transform land titles into collateral in urban Tanzania. Journal of Economic Geography, 23(6), 1213-1236.
- Institutional pluralism and pro-poor land registration: Lessons on interim property rights from urban Tanzania. Land Use Policy, 129, 106654-106654.
- Institutional hybrids through meso-level bricolage: The governance of formal property in urban Tanzania. Geoforum, 140, 103722-103722.
- From policy to institution: Implementing land reform in Dar es Salaam’s unplanned settlements. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 54(7), 1368-1390.
- The depoliticisation of asylum seekers: Carl Schmitt and the Italian system of dispersal reception into cities. Political Geography, 64, 43-52.
- Ask a Local: Improving the Public Pricing of Land Titles in Urban Tanzania. The Review of Economics and Statistics, 1-44.