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There are 6, 998 content items of different types and languages related to land rights on the Land Portal.
Displaying 1849 - 1860 of 3101

Contested Terrain: Oxfam, Gender, and the Aftermath of War

Reports & Research
November, 2001
Slovenia
Liechtenstein
Slovakia
Hungary
Croatia
Australia
Germany
Poland
Macao S.A.R
Czech Republic
Switzerland
Eastern Europe
Eastern Asia

The topic of gender relations in the context of conflict covers highly sensitive terrain, not only within the war-torn society, but for intervening institutions. Like other international humanitarian agencies, Oxfam Great Britain (GB) has faced difficult questions about whether its presence has sometimes done more harm than good. External agencies also have to ask themselves whether their interventions impact negatively on women and gender relations.

Trade Liberalization: Impacts on African Women

Reports & Research
July, 2001
Mozambique
Egypt
Nigeria
South Africa
Uganda
Mali
Somalia
Zimbabwe
Tanzania
Sierra Leone
Western Asia
Western Africa
Global
Eastern Africa
Northern Africa
Southern Africa

Trade liberalisation processes impact differently on men and women due to the fact that men and women have different roles in production. Despite the fact that women are actively involved in international trade, WTO agreements are gender blind and as such have adverse impacts on women. The General Agreement in Trade and Service (GATS), for instance, provides for a level playing field in service provision between big foreign owned companies and small locally owned companies.

Guidelines for Integrating Gender Analysis into Biodiversity Research

Training Resources & Tools
August, 1998
Global

How can gender be mainstreamed into programmes concerned with the sustainable use and management of biodiversity? The International Development Research Centre (IDRC) has produced guidelines on how to integrate gender analysis into biodiversity research. The central role played by women in the maintenance of rural lands, and changing gender roles and relations resulting from cost of living rises and increased migration, are highlighted.

Rural Livelihoods: Land Tenure

Policy Papers & Briefs
May, 1999

Gender issues in land tenure systems. Sections include: key issues; females' less visible roles; instances when women and girls may need special attention; examples of gender sensitive terms of reference; and mini case studies.

Shadow Report, Ethiopia 2003 (Executive Summary)

Policy Papers & Briefs
December, 2002
Ethiopia
Southern Africa
Eastern Africa

This shadow report, produced by NEWA and EWLA, offers a critique of the Ethiopian government's CEDAW report by looking at three broad areas: economic and socio-cultural status of women, equality in marriage and family relations and violence against women. The report acknowledges the considerable efforts made by the Ethiopian government to address its CEDAW obligations, but cites weak enforcement, poor policy guidelines and a lack of institutional commitment as ongoing problems.

BRIDGE Report 42: Global Trade Expansion and Liberalisation: Gender Issues and Impacts

Reports & Research
December, 1997
Pakistan
Sri Lanka
Global
Central Asia
Southern Asia

Do women work more or less when countries trade more? Do trade expansion and economic liberalisation affect women and men in different ways'? Case studies from Ghana, Uganda, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Jamaica are used in this report to illustrate some of the gender dimensions relating to trade. Present evidence suggests that, under certain conditions, export expansion can benefit certain groups of younger, more educated women. However in general, the rights of women workers to fair terms and conditions of employment need protection.

Widows, AIDS, Health and Human Rights in Africa

Reports & Research
June, 2004
Tanzania
Southern Africa
Eastern Africa

This paper argues that widows and female children in Tanzania have traditionally been denied the right to inherit property from their husbands, even when the property was acquired during the marriage. This is further complicated by a three-part legal system consisting of customary law (law grounded in customs or traditions), Islamic law, and statutory law (law set down by a legislature). As a result, Tanzanian women and their children are often left homeless upon the death of their husbands.

Africa: Land for the Women who Farm it

Reports & Research
March, 2003
Burkina Faso
Tunisia
Senegal
Western Africa
Western Asia
Northern Africa

Women do 70 per cent of the agricultural work in Senegal, but according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), own only two percent of the land that may be cultivated. Although property laws in countries such as Senegal, Tunisia and Burkina Faso recognise women' s and men's equal rights, and Islam gives women the right to inherit half what men inherit, in practice men retain land ownership. Women are dependent on fathers or husbands for land.

An Analysis of the WTO-AOA Review from the Perspective of Rural Women in Asia

Reports & Research
January, 2003
Indonesia
Philippines
Eastern Asia
South-Eastern Asia

How does the World Trade Organization's (WTO) Agreement on Agriculture (AOA) affect the livelihoods of rural women in Asia? This paper, prepared on the occasion of the WTO-AOA review in 2003, analyzes the impact of the new trading rules imposed by the WTO on Asian peasants. It illustrates the inherent imbalances in the WTO-AOA's trade liberalisation policies which, among other things, flood local markets with highly subsidized agricultural imports from developed countries to the detriment of domestic agriculture.

Women's Informal Employment in Transition Economies

Reports & Research
September, 2002
Slovenia
Liechtenstein
Slovakia
Hungary
Croatia
Poland
Germany
Australia
Czech Republic
Switzerland
Eastern Europe

Women's employment in transition countries, notably Central and Eastern Europe has become increasingly informal and flexible. The first growing trend is that women are more involved in cross-border trade, known as 'suitcase' trade, often keeping women away from home for days or months. They buy mainly consumer and household goods usually unavailable in their home countries, to sell to street vendors on their return home. The second growing trend is women's involvement in sub-contracting, particularly work such as hand sewing for the textile and shoe industries.