Africa

Action Research in Tanzania on HIV Prevention and Protection for Older Girls

ICRW, in collaboration with Pact Tanzania, TAMASHA and ViiV Healthcare's Positive Action, aims to understand and address the multiple HIV-related risks and vulnerabilities of girls ages 12-17 in four wards of Newala district in southern Tanzania.

Young women from these wards are trained in participatory research methods to conduct a situation analysis in their communities. The aim of this analysis is to better understand the gender-specific vulnerabilities of older girls to HIV.

Based on this information, ICRW and its partners work with the young researchers and community stakeholders to develop and assess a program model to meet the needs of older girls. The extent to which program activities are meeting these needs, and the opportunities and resources available to enhance programming is also assessed.

Duration: 
2009 - 2011
Location(s): 
Tanzania

Roadside Beads

Maasai Women Create Their Own Market

My favorite part of traveling is seeing the impact of ICRW’s work first hand. Sometimes, the determination of the women we serve is profoundly impressive. This was the case on my recent trip to Kenya.

Girl Power in Tanzania

A Journey from Shy to Confident

I first met the young women on a sunny Monday morning as they sat under a tree in front of a teachers' training center in Newala, a town so far south in Tanzania that if you stand at its highest point, you can see Mozambique.

Promoting Action-Oriented Research on Violence

Evaluations of programs working to end violence against women note that there is a need for greater coherence between evidence, policy and programs. Although global research studies have shed light on intimate-partner violence, there are still many forms of violence against women which are not well documented or understood.

To address this, ICRW, worked in partnership with the Medical Research Council (MRC) of South Africa and the Gender-Based Violence Prevention Network, to promote action-oriented research on violence against women in East and Southern Africa. The initiative linked local implementing organizations with research institutions to conduct joint research on violence against women and apply the findings to improve programs. ICRW and MRC supported the research institutions as they provided technical assistance and oversight, mentoring and training for implementing organizations.

The initiative aimed to increase the capacity of local organizations to conduct rigorous research to improve their programs. Additionally, the research studies established a regional evidence base to inform policies and programs to eliminate violence against women. 

Duration: 
2008 - 2012
Location(s): 
Ethiopia
Location(s): 
Kenya
Location(s): 
Malawi
Location(s): 
Rwanda
Location(s): 
South Africa
Location(s): 
Tanzania
Location(s): 
Uganda

Sound Off, Sign On

Stop Rape in the Democratic Republic of Congo

I was recently in Goma, a city in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, to help train staff of an international aid organization on how to involve men in helping to reduce violence against women.

Ringing Potential

What Cell Phones Can Do for Women

Out in a rural village in Western Kenya, two hours from the nearest large town, and all I could think about were cell phones.

Fighting for Her Land

ICRW and Partners Help Ugandan Women Understand Their Property Rights
Mon, 08/30/2010

A widowed mother of six finds herself in the midst of a dispute over land, and in the process learns how to exercise her property rights.

A widowed mother of six finds herself in the midst of a dispute over land, and in the process learns how to exercise her property rights.

Olivia NakaziLUWERO DISTRICT, Uganda – Soon after her husband died, Olivia Nakazi’s troubles began anew. As she struggled to support her six children, the youngest then just two years old, Olivia found herself at the center of a conflict over the very ground she lived on: four acres that belonged to her father-in-law.

Olivia’s husband had no will, nor was there written proof of who owned the land. Her in-laws wanted it for themselves. Painful as it was, Olivia says, it was not entirely unexpected.

“Even before my husband died, I thought there would be some problems,” she says, adding that his relatives had expressed interest in the land “even while he was alive.”

Such disputes are not unusual in rural Uganda, where women’s right to property, though protected under Ugandan law, often is overlooked, abused or ignored.

“Traditionally, ownership isn’t documented, and written documentation of land rights or even wills are new concepts in many communities,” says economist Krista Jacobs, an International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) expert on women’s property rights. Jacobs leads an ICRW program that helps women understand and exercise their property rights in the Luwero District of central Uganda, nearly 50 miles north of the capital, Kampala.

“Women’s ability to use land and other assets often depends more on the relationships they have with their family or community,” she says, “rather than the land being formally registered with the government or registered in a woman’s name.”

For women in developing countries, owning property can be an avenue out of poverty. When they own a plot of land, they can grow food on it. What they reap helps feed their families – improving their nutrition and health – and provides products to sell. Or, when women own assets such as livestock, they have a regular source of milk, eggs and meat that also can be sold at a market and used at home.

“Women who have and control property are more economically secure, have a place to live, can more easily start or grow a business and can better care for their families,” Jacobs says. “Women with land and property have more resources to move themselves, their families and their communities out of poverty.”

Property rights in Uganda
In Uganda, women’s right to own land and other property was solidified in the 1995 constitution, the country's third since its independence from Britain in 1962. The constitution also defined the types of ownership that are legally recognized. Later legislation described how constitutional regulations were to be enacted, upheld women’s property rights and clarified the rights of landlords and tenants.

But reforming Uganda’s land ownership system has not been without controversy. It's been marked in part by tenants’ claims that landlords – and the government – want to kick them off their property in order to consolidate it for sale or lease. And as property values have increased in recent years, Ugandan women like Olivia are being thrown off their land by in-laws, local landlords or even their husbands. Often ignorant of their rights, many women end up destitute.

To address this, ICRW has teamed up with Uganda Land Alliance (ULA) to arm 20 volunteers – referred to locally as grassroots paralegals – with skills to mediate conflicts like the one Olivia faced. Working in partnership with ULA, ICRW developed training curriculum to help strengthen paralegals’ effort to educate communities about women’s legal right to own property and act as liaisons to help women resolve land disputes. ICRW is also guiding ULA on how to monitor the effectiveness of the endeavor.

When the program began in 2009, an ICRW survey found that most Luwero District residents believed that a married or single woman had the right to own property and have her name listed on the necessary documentation. However, on average, Jacobs says residents were ambivalent about women receiving property after a divorce or allowing widowed women living with HIV to inherit land from their husbands.

ICRW also discovered that most don’t understand Uganda’s laws that define who owns what and describe responsibilities and rights over property.

Now a year into ICRW’s three-year effort with ULA, Jacobs says that paralegals are becoming a go-to resource for residents, especially women whose conflicts regarding property weren’t being addressed.

For Olivia, holding on to her land in her village of Kibike was a matter of right for her family. Jacobs says her situation reflects one of the more common land disputes over ownership.

It isn’t unusual for a father to give his son a piece of land to cultivate and build a home – a transaction that's usually made verbally. If the son dies, it’s not always clear whether the land is part of his – or his father’s – estate. And if he leaves behind a wife? Ugandan law states that women have the right to live on their matrimonial land, Jacobs says.

“It’s not so much that the law is unclear,” she says. “It’s that there’s so little awareness and observance of the law and of women’s rights. Nor is there much documentation of ownership or of how the land can be used and by whom. That’s what contributes to these messy disputes.”

A leader intervenes

In Olivia's case, an eviction notice loomed. So she turned to her community’s leader, Richard Ssali, a paralegal trained by ULA and ICRW.

She says Ssali told her family members “that if they kick me out, that would be against the law.”

With Olivia’s dispute headed to court, Ssali managed to bring family members and Olivia to mediation. Eventually, the family agreed to provide 1½ acres of the four-acre plot for Olivia to live on. To avoid future problems, Ssali referred her to a local non-governmental agency that deals with land rights. They in turn got Olivia’s family members to sign an agreement that she and her children wouldn’t be kicked off the property.

Ssali says he has noticed a difference in his community since paralegals have become available.

“Some women have started having their own property in families. And some men are starting to give women their rights,” he says. “From way back they never allowed women to have property. But now they are seeing the advantages of women having property.”

Olivia used income she earned from a small business she started to build a home on the plot. Finally, she felt secure.

Despite her struggle to retain the land she had lived on for years, Olivia says she never thought of leaving – an option many women in similar circumstances feel they must take. Many choose to return to their native villages with no land, no home and no support from in-laws after the death of a husband.

When asked why she decided to stand firm and fight, Olivia glanced at her children.

“I was determined to stay here because this is my children’s home,” she says. “This is where they live.”

Photojournalist David Snyder covered this story for ICRW in Uganda. ICRW Writer/Editor Gillian Gaynair contributed from Washington, D.C.

Costs of Maternal Morbidity and Mortality in Kenya

 

Poor maternal health outcomes result in huge social and economic costs for women and the communities they live in. ICRW, Family Care International (FCI) and Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) have been conducting a research study to explore the short- and long-term costs and consequences of maternal death. This project, based in Kenya, aims to document and analyze financial, economic and social costs to families and communities affected by maternal death

The data highlights the importance of maternal health for the health and well-being of newborns and children, as well as the other surviving household members, and contribute to advocacy efforts for increased attention to maternal mortality and investments in maternal health by adding to the knowledge base about, and disseminating our findings on, the extent and types of costs of maternal death

Duration: 
2010 - 2013
Location(s): 
Kenya

Making Public Spaces Safe for Women

Women and girls are frequently subject to violence and abuse – from physical and verbal harassment to assault and rape – on city streets, public transportation or in their own neighborhoods. Such daily occurrences limit the rights and freedoms of women as equal citizens to enjoy their neighborhoods and cities.

ICRW worked with UNIFEM to develop ways to make public spaces safer for women and girls. The program, Safe Cities Free of Violence Against Women and Girls, was the first-ever global comparative effort to develop a model that was rigorously evaluated for its processes and impact across different settings. The goal of the program was to develop and test a global model which can be replicated and tailored to the specificities of local contexts.

ICRW collaborated with local partners on project design and the impact evaluation strategy. The project aimed to improve women’s safety by empowering women within the community, encouraging community advocacy for safer spaces, partnering with local governments, working with men and boys, and raising public awareness through the media.

Duration: 
2009 - 2010
Location(s): 
Egypt
Location(s): 
Papua New Guinea
Location(s): 
India
Location(s): 
Ecuador
Location(s): 
Rwanda

Empowering Communities to Empower Girls

ICRW collaborated with the Nike Foundation, Tostan and the Centre for Research in Human Development to improve the well-being of adolescent girls in 55 communities in Kaolack and Thiès, Senegal. This project is part of Tostan's Community Empowerment Program (CEP), which provides communities with the skills and knowledge to improve their living conditions in a sustainable way. The project involved adolescent girls in CEP program activities that included modules on democracy, human rights, problem solving, hygiene, health, literacy and management skills.

ICRW conducted an evaluation of the project and provided support to Tostan to integrate gender throughout the life of the project. ICRW also worked with Tostan to build its capacity to conduct future evaluations to measure the effects of its programs on social change and gender equity.

Duration: 
2009 - 2012
Location(s): 
Senegal
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