The Land Portal Foundation and the NRMC Center for Land Governance partnered with key organizations to hold a series of three webinars on Forest Rights and Governance in India, Land Rights for Slum Dwellers in the East Indian State Odisha: Making technology work for the urban poor and Women Inheriting Land: Rights and Realities, leading up to the third annual India Land and Development Conference (ILDC), which will take place from 12-14 March, 2019. The results of these webinars will inform discussions at respective panel sessions during the conference with the aim of making panel-conversations more nuanced while also ensuring deeper dives into the subject, thereby achieving more actionable results. The ultimate goal of these webinars is to contribute to desirable changes in institutional frameworks and to eliminating barriers that are limiting implementation of legal and policy frameworks, through enhanced awareness and understandings of stakeholders. In addition, these webinars will connect local and global discourse and audiences, with the immediate outcome of enhanced and nuanced appreciation of the issue and more informed actions that contribute to better results.
The webinar on Women Inheriting Land: Rights and Realities took place on 22 February. The webinar was co-organized by Landesa and the Working Group for Women and Land Ownership (WGWLO) with support from the NRMC Center for Land Governance and the Land Portal Foundation.
Ownership and control over land is essential to ensuring gender equality and improve the quality of lives of not only women, but also of their families and communities. Despite a hoard of international and national commitments, ownership of land continues to be an area with appalling disparities between men and women. An overlapping web of legal, structural, socioeconomic, and cultural factors prevent women from realizing their right to own land. These complexities and the opportunities therein, lay the background of the proposed webinar.
The objective of this interactive and dynamic webinar was to discuss the significance of owning land through inheritance, the challenges that prevent women from inheriting land, the opportunities offered through the best practices and the possible actions that can be taken at different levels.
This webinar is part of the global campaign to close the gap between policy and practice in women’s land rights.
Panelists:
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Dr. Govind Kelkar, Senior Advisor -women, Land and Productive Assets, Landesa -India.
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Dr. Hema Swaminathan, Associate Professor, Center for Public Policy IIM – Bangalore.
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Ms. Niti Saxena, Activist and Researcher, Uttar Pradesh.
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Dr. Varsha Bhagat-Ganguly, Researcher & former Convener, Working Group on Women and Land Ownership (WGWLO), Gujarat.
Moderator:
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Ms. Shipra Deo, Director, Women Land Rights, Landesa – India
Broad Areas of discussion:
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Women‘s rights to inherit land in the context of human rights and global commitments
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Legal and policy environment pertaining to inheritance by women in India
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Socio cultural barriers to inheritance of land by women
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Good Practices and progress made to ensure women's right to inherit land
Questions that were addressed:
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Why does it matter for women to own land, and why is it important to talk about inheritance in the context? Does land ownership connect in any way to Sustainable Development Goals which we globally aim to achieve?
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How do laws and policy commitments in India relate to this? What does Indian constitution say?
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Are there any legal barriers for ensuring women's inheritance rights to land? What do studies in India suggest about the ground reality regarding the same?
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People often say women themselves don’t claim land, and they write off their share to brothers. I have often seen people saying ‘it will break homes, if daughters start claiming for land’. To what extent do you think is this true? What has been your experience?
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What are the reasons in India for such significant gaps between the law and the ground reality?
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Have there been progress/good practices in the country to bridge this gap between the legal commitment and the ground reality? What are they?
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What are the monitoring mechanism for tracking women's inheritance rights to land are ensured?
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What could be done at a policy level to ensure and enhance women's inheritance rights to land? Is the government giving enough attention to it?