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News & Events Local Movement Leveraging the Sustainable Development Goals to Strengthen Women's Land Rights in Brazil
Local Movement Leveraging the Sustainable Development Goals to Strengthen Women's Land Rights in Brazil
Local Movement Leveraging the Sustainable Development Goals to Strengthen Women's Land Rights in Brazil

By Patricia ChavesJolyne Sanjak and Malcolm Childress

 

On Feb. 1, 2017, Espaço Feminista hosted a forum in Bonito, Pernambuco, Brazil on women’s land right. Our objective was to bring the SDG discussion to the local level, where changes really occur. The event brought together a diverse audience: members of the women’s movement, academia, researchers, civil society and the local, state and national governments to advocate for women’s land rights. Our ambition was to give women the opportunity to directly discuss land issues with all levels of governments and represented a milestone in the development of a local movement of women activists cooperating with all levels and branches of government. The talks also represented a breakthrough in using the SDGs and their proposed indicators als a framework for clarifying commitments and monitoring the government’s actions in providing equitable and secure land rights for women.

 

The meeting was an unprecedented accomplishment for women’s land rights activism in Pernambuco. It attracted participants from institutions and municipalities within the territory of Agreste Central and was covered in the news.  Out of 81 participants, 56 of them were from grassroots women constituencies representing a plurality of voices and identities. These stakeholders focused on the joint actions of women’s groups and government agencies to implement and measure public policies that can contribute to the achievement of selected SDGs and their targets, based on a set of localized SDG indicators adapted to the specific Brazilian reality.

 

This new movement in Brazil’s Pernambuco state uplifts the power of the women’s movement with the capacity state and local government to tackle the problem of land rights for women using the SDGs to define targets and monitor progress. With support from international organizations, including Huairou Commission, Landesa, and Land Alliance, the movement is beginning to make a difference as government has started to respond to the local interest of incorporating frameworks developed by the grassroots.  This is just the beginning of a long and challenging path ahead to ensure equal land rights for women.

 

Harnessing the SDGs to a local initiative is an innovative and powerful approach that is showing results.  SDGs provide internationally agreed upon objectives and a detailed set of indicators which local movements can utilize to create a ready-made monitoring framework for progress. Taken together, this “global framework—local action” approach is offering new opportunities to scale up and speed up progress in women’s land rights.

 

Land rights are a highly local issue and making progress requires local social mobilization, local understanding of the problems and a local responses by government to address the issue. But local activism around widely dispersed and long-standing issues like women’s land can be easy to ignore by the government.

 

 

 

Bringing a wide range of stakeholders together

 

The gathering in Bonito reviewed our monitoring process that collects and analyzes data from official databases such as IBGE to measure change in specific issues related to the selected targets. Bonito forum represented a breakthrough in that process: for the first time in that process, the official data collected on the Agreste Central territory was presented to a diverse audience of stakeholders. The data created a powerful center for the discussion about women’s land rights and allowed the grassroots women to lead the discussion. The examples presented on women’s situations clearly depicted the problems related to land access, use and control and how these problems affect women’s capacity to live in rural areas and force them to migrate to the periphery of the cities, where they face inadequacy of housing, infrastructure and basic services. These data strongly supported the women to present their claims and priorities to government officials. The reaction was very positive and an agreement was reached between the different participants. We promised to continue to work across the territory assisting the local groups in monitoring public policies implementation and measuring the changes.

 

 

 

Scaling Up: Global Framework – Local Action in Latin America

 

The gathering put together and gained the commitment towards that process from a comprehensive number of stakeholders. It drew representation from all levels of the government, such as the Ministry of Agrarian Reform, State of Pernambuco Government through the Women’s Issue Secretary and the President of Pernambuco Land Institute, the Mayor and the Deputy Mayor of Bonito, the President of Bonito’s City Council, municipal secretaries from the local governments, the judiciary (Pernambuco Public Ministry and the Agrarian Tribunal), NGOs, and academia. But most importantly, a diverse group of women representing indigenous, rural workers, family farmers, urban, and landless groups participated in the meeting.

 

 

 

The discussion was an excellent opportunity to share the “bottom-up” SDG monitoring methodology with women from different countries of Latin America. Representing large networks and women’s movements from the region, the group who attended the Local Dialogue in Bonito left with a strong commitment to join forces with Pernambuco movement in using the SDGs to advance women’s land rights in the region.

 

 

 

The main lessons learnt from this process are:

 

 

 

 

 

  • It is crucial to understand that most policies are implemented at local level, and in order to achieve the SDGs, we will need good policies implemented at local level
  • People relate more often and easily to local authorities and therefore, it is easier for grassroots (women and men) to establish a direct connection with local governments
  • Information is power and women groups operating at local level need to be strengthened and reinforced in their capacity to claim and gain better policies and existing policies through a better understanding of their situation and that knowledge need to be based in that reality.
  • In order to overcome the barriers and difficulties in developing better policies at local level, it is essential to put the different groups together and facilitate their dialogue. Thus, although difficult, it is essential to bridge the differences and recognize the conflicts of interest, therefore creating the conditions to build a coalition of partners from different groups, backgrounds and positions to advance in improving the living conditions of the most vulnerable groups through a fruitful dialogue in which the differences (of perception, interest, knowledge) are discussed and considered in public policies formulation and implementation.

The Pernambuco movement is taking an innovative approach by making land rights a focus of the women’s movement, breaking new ground beyond traditional issue areas like education, health, sexual and reproductive rights, and domestic violence. Linking local movements to the SDGs and monitoring indicators helps local activists to find common grounds with international actors, and provides a mechanism to monitor progress based on data.

 

As organizers of the event we were privileged to work with local and international leaders who are the power behind the Pernambuco movement. We are optimistic that the SDGs can help women and local governments achieve more success for women’s land use issues.

 

This blog was originally posted on the Landesa Field Focus Blog.

 

 

 

Patricia Chaves is Executive Director of Espaço Feminista

 

Jolyne Sanjak is Chief Program Officer at Landesa

 

Malcolm Childress is an Executive Director 

 

Related content:

Dataset Portfolio

Prindex - Global Property Rights Index - 2016 Pilot

PRIndex stands for the Global Property Rights Index, an indicator of citizens' perceptions of the security of property rights, and this page only displays the results of the first pilot and testing phase run in 2016-2017.

The pilot phase of development and testing of the index took place in nine countries (Brazil, Colombia, Egypt, Greece, India, Indonesia, Nigeria, Peru and Tanzania) during 2016 and 2017.

A second phase of data collection, using a new improved methodology and planned for 2018-2019, is currently on-going and new Prindex data for 15 countries are now available on https://www.prindex.net/data/.

Please note that the data collected during the pilot and the data collected during the second phase are not directly comparable, due to the improvements made to the Prindex methodology. A selection of relevant indicators from the new Prindex data will soon be made available on the Land Portal too.

The Global Property Rights Index is an initiative of ODI and Land Alliance supported by Omidyar Network, DFID and other donors. It aims to fill the gap in information about individual perception of tenure security by creating a baseline global dataset to support the achievement of secure property rights around the world.

 

 

PRIndex: Interactive indicators

Rate of property documentation

Perceived tenure security

The PRIndex dataset presented here contains indicators based on the pilot survey data collected in 8 countries with nationally representative samples.