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Issues legal empowerment related Blog post
There are 555 content items of different types and languages related to legal empowerment on the Land Portal.
Displaying 25 - 36 of 46

Mobilizing Change for Women Within Collective Tenure Regimes

17 November 2019
liana Monterroso Ibarra

Local communities manage a significant portion of the world’s remaining forests, pastures, and fisheries as common property resources, but they are rarely recognized as formal owners. Important progress has occurred during the last twenty years, as growing evidence suggests that devolving rights to communities can provide incentives for new forms of investment that facilitate sustainable outcomes as well as greater equity in the distribution of benefits.

Caruaru and Bonito municipalities poised to implement land regularization giving women tenure security

16 May 2019
Patricia Chaves

Over the last 2 years, a bottom-up SDGs monitoring process has been developing in the municipalities of Caruaru and Bonito to give women tenure security. 

Caruaru and Bonito are located in the semi-arid region of Pernambuco state in northeast Brazil, where grassroots women have been supported by Espaço Feminista,a civil society organization dedicated to women’s economic and political empowerment through public policies. 

USAID’s MAST mobile tech programs promote women’s empowerment in Tanzania and Zambia

21 March 2019

By Deborah Espinosa and Patrick Gallagher, USAID’s Land Technology Solutions Program


 


Persistent and pervasive gender inequality is a global development challenge that constrains economic growth, educational opportunities, and health outcomes. It jeopardizes food security and undermines poverty reduction strategies. The world over, some formal and many informal laws and customs operate to hinder women’s empowerment and thus their full potential as agents of economic and social change.


Demystifying Data: Data That Empowers

08 March 2019

A data story from women in a semiarid region of Brazil

*This story was written by the following women: Ducicleide Maria da Silva, Gigliola Silva Araújo, Ianka Sayonara da Silva, Josefa Ferreira da Silva, Maria do Carmo da Conceição Carvalho, Maria Karoline Policarpo Silva, Manuella Donato, Mariana de Albuquerque Vilarim and Thalya Carla Vieira de Lima and Patricia Maria Chaves .  It was translated by Sonia Jay Wright.*  

Walk the Talk: Rural women demand for accountability on land rights in Africa

15 January 2019
Fridah Githuku

Rural women demand for accountability on land rights in Africa as we celebrate the second anniversary of the Kilimanjaro Initiative.


On December 11 2018, at the sidelines of the second ordinary session of the Economic Commission of West African States (ECOWAS) Parliament, a parliamentary network on gender equality in land, agricultural investments and food security was launched.


Bad-faith Contracts & Unjust Investments – How Can Communities Protect Their Interests?

20 September 2018
Rachael Knight
Kaitlin Cordes

Deciding whether or not to allow an investor to use community lands and natural resources is one of the most important decisions a community can make. Namati and the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (CCSI) have published two new guides to help communities prepare for interactions with investors and, if they so wish, negotiate fair, equitable contracts. These guides are the first of their kind.

Land Rights Are the Invisible Investment Risk Too Many Ignore

28 August 2018
Laura Notess
PeterVeit

Land conflicts can be fatal for burgeoning agribusiness or other enterprises located in rural regions, but many companies have limited knowledge of how to anticipate and evaluate land-related risk. This is particularly true for land held under collective arrangements by Indigenous peoples or other communities, which is seldom formally documented.


 


Vacant Land, or Invisible Risk?


Chicoco Collective Human City Project

13 August 2018
Michael Uwemedimo

OUR CITY: WHY WE WORK WHERE WE WORK

‘Chicoco’ means mud, the black, fibrous mud that people living in Port Harcourt’s waterfront communities cut from the mangroves and throw down on the river’s edge to reclaim land from the creeks. They build their homes on this mud.

‘MANY VOICES MAKE A CITY. SOME PEOPLE ARE TRYING TO TEAR THE CITY DOWN. BUT WE ARE CITY BUILDERS AND THIS IS OUR RHYTHM, OUR RIGHT, OUR VOICE.’