Jan Peterson,
Chair of the Huairou Commission
Land is a vital asset for ensuring women’s security and empowerment. Just ensuring employment is not enough.
Grassroots women are finding effective ways to secure control over land, housing and basic services
The gendered asset gap is nothing new
We are calling for new forms of partnerships and resource allocations so that organized groups of poor women can build a collective action platform to exert effective control over land, housing, property and other productive assets.
Grassroots centered networks are shifting power-relations and helping grassroots women to secure land
Slum/Shackdwellers International works on securing housing and land rights by creating mass organizing, based on changing how knowledge is produced and who owns and controls that knowledge
The Huairou Commission
GROOTS International
Streetnet
Casting women in the role of partners
Mobilizing community based organizations
Putting information in the hands of women.
Creating safe spaces for women and children
Making institutions responsive and accountable to communities.
Restoring, diversifying and upgrading livelihoods to collective enterprise
Transferring innovations through peer exchange
AIDS - Disaster - Governance - Land
Campaigns are based in women’s on the ground collective organizing
Women’s groups engage in negotiations with decision-makers local to global to ensure their priorities are included in planning, policy-making and resource allocation
Land and property rights generally understood as issues simply of legal reform and literacy
Grassroots-led mapping allows women to undertake more complex analysis of actors and power relations
Mapping changes the way knowledge is produced and who controls it. Knowledge becomes the basis for strategic, collective action and organizing
In Kenya, mapping resulted in the creation
Community Watch Dog Groups, a partnership between grassroots women, chiefs, community leaders and councillors
Watch Dog Groups, monitor local land practices, prevent land seizures, raise awareness of existing land policies and help guide women through the process of getting their land back
What needs to shift to scale up this approach and increase positive impacts for grassroots women and poor communities?
Partners, researchers, development professionals, UN agencies and donors need to open up space for grassroots women’s organizing
Support initiatives and actions in which grassroots women are leaders
Institutions need to be made responsive and accountable to communities
Women’s Land Link Africa: a partnership between grassroots women’s groups (Huairou Commission), human rights (COHRE) and UN agencies (Habitat, FAO), in which grassroots women are supported to map tenure systems and scale up their own initiatives
Slum/Shack Dwellers International and Society for the
Promotion of Area Resource Centers (SPARC) have revolutionized partnerships. Professionals in SPARC act as support people for Slumdwellers’ groups
Streetnet International and WIEGO, in which researchers create statistics based on the agenda set by informal workers’ unions