Webinar: Realizing women’s land rights in Africa
This webinar will feature experiences from several grassroots initiatives and highlight how they fight for women's improved access to and control over land and other natural resources and to scale up women's land rights.
In October 2016, women farmers from 22 countries across Africa climbed the peak of Mount Kilimanjaro to claim women's rights for access to and control over land and natural resources. This event coincided with the launch of a campaign of the African Land Policy Centre (ALPC) to reach the target of having 30 percent of all registered land in the name of women by 2025 and to embed women's land rights into the targets of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
In line with these initiatives, there has been increased attention for women's land rights by grassroots movements, local governments, civil society organisations, academics, and international organisations. Nonetheless, despite progressive policies, legal frameworks, and strong civil society engagement in many countries, there is still a lot to be done to feel a real impact on the ground.
The webinar is co-hosted by Acção Académica Para O Desenvolvimento Das Comunidades Rurai (ADECRU) (Mozambique), Both ENDS, ENDA Pronat (Senegal), Fórum Mulher (Mozambique), GROOTS Kenya, LANDac, the Land Portal Foundation and OXFAM Novib.
Register Now (link is external)
Panelists will address the following questions:
- Why do women's land rights remain an issue with so much attention focusing on it? What went wrong?
- What are good practices in achieving success towards women's land rights and what – according to your own perspective – made these initiatives and strategies successful?
- What is needed next to scale up these approaches and to move the women's land rights agenda forward?
- What is the message to policy makers to scale up these approaches?
Moderator:
- Griet Steel (Utrecht University and LANDac, the Netherlands).
Panelists:
- Nzira Razão Deus (Fórum Mulher, Mozambique)
- El Hadji Faye (Enda Pronat, Senegal)
- Fridah Githuku (Groots Kenya)
- Sreetama Gupta Bhaya (Oxfam Novib, India)
For more information
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Event / 21 september 2022, 13:00 - 14:30
Showcasing transformative approaches for women’s land rights
Both ENDS and the Land Portal Foundation invite you to the third webinar in the Whose Land? Inclusive Pathways to Land Governance series. This third Whose Land? webinar will showcase gender transformative approaches on women's land rights. Gender transformative approaches are defined by women acting as agents of change, transforming structural barriers and redefining gender norms. These approaches facilitate the participation of women in land governance decision-making processes, but require closing the land data gender gap.
Register here
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Blog / 8 maart 2019
Women lead struggle for land rights for the Avá Guaraní
By Tamara MohrTogether with five women from the Platform Suace Pyvyvõhára, I travel to Mingã Pora in the east of Paraguay. Around 45 families from the indigenous Tekohá Suace community settled here in 2016. In Guaraní, Tekohá means 'the place where we are what we are'. They reside in tents - self-made out of waste materials - on a small strip of land with a soy field on one side and a nature reserve owned by the Itaipu company on the other.
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Publication / 30 oktober 2023
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Publication / 8 maart 2018
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Publication / 24 april 2023
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Letter / 19 oktober 2022
Both ENDS' input to the 'Consultation Feminist Foreign Policy' of Ministry of Foreign AffairsZa
In May 2022, Minister Hoekstra of Foreign Affairs and Minister Schreinemacher for International Trade and Development Cooperation announced that also The Netherlands will work towards implementing a Feminist Foreign Policy (FFP). This means that within its Foreign Policy, the Netherlands will pay more attention to inclusivity in general and specifically to women's rights and gender equality, including LGBTIQ+. This feminist lens will be central to all aspects of foreign policy; security, trade, diplomacy and international cooperation.
To foster an inclusive process and acquire insights in what a Dutch FFP should look like, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs opened an internet consultation. Both ENDS welcomes the FFP and therefore gladly shares its input and suggestions.
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Publication / 1 september 2017
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External link / 24 juni 2023
Women’s land rights in Mozambique (Annual Report 2022)
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News / 23 maart 2020
Women in Latin America claim their right to water
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News / 8 mei 2019
The "Heart trumps hates" campaign calls on the Dutch to choose for solidarity
Organisations join forces against polarisation
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News / 8 maart 2018
Only 0.2 % of all foundation funding for women & environment
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News / 2 juli 2019
Indonesia: Women’s Right to Water
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Event / 14 maart 2022, 11:00 - 12:30
CSW66 Side Event: Feminist solutions for the environmental and climate crisis
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Register here!
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Dossier /
Global Alliance for Green and Gender Action (GAGGA)
GAGGA rallies the collective power of the women's rights and environmental justice movements to realize a world where women can and do access their rights to water, food security, and a clean, healthy and safe environment.
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Publication / 26 november 2020
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External link / 20 juli 2021
Women’s rights and Non-Timber Forest Products (Annual Report 2020)
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News / 16 november 2023
Voting with a worldwide impact
Disposable fashion items continue to flood into the country, the nitrogen crisis has brought construction to a standstill and energy poverty is on the rise, but Dutch politicians are contemplating their navels. These are problems that we can never solve on our own. The clothes we wear, the food on our plates, and the electricity that comes out of our wall sockets – they are all produced in global trade and production chains. With far-reaching consequences, both in our own country and far, very far beyond our borders. It would be naive to think that we can solve all these problems through domestic policies alone. And vice versa: we would be evading our responsibilities if we continued to believe that the Netherlands only plays a humble role on the global stage. Latest figures show that the Netherlands is the fourth largest exporter and the seventh largest importer of products worldwide. With the elections on the way, it is time to look beyond our own small country. Because it is also important to vote with a worldwide impact.
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News / 14 december 2022
Irene Dankelman, founder of Both ENDS becomes Officer in the Order of Orange-Nassau
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News / 28 september 2018
Joan Carling is awarded with the UN’s highest environmental honor!
We congratulate Joan Carling, member of the permanent commission on indigenous peoples of the UN, for having received the Lifetime Achievement Award as 'Champion of the Earth' by the UN Environment! This is the UN's highest environmental honor, given to six of the world's most outstanding environmental change makers once a year.
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Publication / 1 september 2017