Events

Women across Africa call for greater land ownership rights


Partnership-for-action conference addresses need of land ownership for women in Africa

Influential women from across Africa gathered in Pretoria this week to share their findings on (among other things) land-policy initiatives, including women’s rights to own land. They were part of a conference hosted by Habitat for Humanity’s Solid Ground Campaign in association with the Urban CSO Cluster of the Global Land Tool Network (GLTN) of UN-HABITAT, focusing on land governance and management in Africa.

“The partnership-for-action conference saw an opportunity for policy-makers, academics and members from many organisations to share valuable information to help the transformation of policy development in Africa,” said Tamzin Hudson, advocacy specialist for Habitat for Humanity International. A common thread was the issue of gender inequality and the high priority it should take when working on land-governance related policy-making.

Women need to have the right to bequeath land, trade land and cultivate land with the knowledge that the land belongs to them.

Jacqueline Amongin, Uganda’s representative of the Pan African Parliament

“We need to address equal rights to ownership to land, and ensure that the land-policy framework that we develop, guarantees equal rights to all people, including women, who have been excluded historically from inheriting land in Liberia,” said conference attendee Ellen Pratt, the Commissioner of Land Use and Management with the Liberian Land Authority.

Education and information are also paramount to ensure women are aware of their rights to land and the right to have their names on documentation. “Women need to have the right to bequeath land, trade land and cultivate land with the knowledge that the land belongs to them,” said Jacqueline Amongin, Uganda’s representative of the Pan African Parliament.

Marc Wegerif has worked on development and human-rights issues in a range of organisations for over 25 years, and is currently the Land Rights Policy Lead with Oxfam. Speaking on gender and women’s rights, at the conference, he pointed out that in communities where women have stronger land rights, there are lower levels of both of hunger and of violence against women. “With control over the land they depend on for their livelihoods, women are able to take more control of their lives. Women also play a vital role in the betterment of their families and communities, giving them secure land rights should be imperative.” says Wegerif.

Land is essential to securing shelter, for agriculture for food security, for mobilising investments and for sustainable management of resources. “Including women in decision-making in land policy, and creating programmes that give women the necessary tools to secure land ownership, will address the challenges facing most African countries,” Hudson said.

The conference took place in partnership with the Namibia University of Science and Technology (NUST), Habitat International Coalition (HIC), Pamoja Trust, the Huairou Commission, and Slum/Shack Dwellers International (SDI). Stakeholders from multiple sectors came together to explore approaches to land governance for inclusive and sustainable development in Africa.

For further information, please visit http://solidgroundcampaign.org/partnershipforaction


Republished from Habitat for Humanity Ireland.