Krista Jacobs

The Right to Land

What new guidelines could mean for women's land rights

A new set of global guidelines hold promise for women seeking the right to own and access land. In the final installment of our Rural Impressions blog series, ICRW's Krista Jacobs reflects on what the guidelines could mean for women farmers in Uganda.

A new set of global guidelines hold promise for women seeking the right to own and access land. In the final installment of our Rural Impressions blog series, ICRW's Krista Jacobs reflects on what the guidelines could mean for women farmers in Uganda.

Advancing Women's Asset Rights

Study Shows Gender Norms Heavily Influence Women’s Asset Ownership
Tue, 06/28/2011

An innovative new survey reveals that women’s right to own property and assets is as much about power dynamics between women and men as legal rights.

Women’s right to own property and assetsWomen’s right to own property and assets is as much about power dynamics between women and men as legal rights, according to new findings released by the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). The results emerge from the Gender, Land and Asset Survey or GLAS, an innovative study that aims to understand the current state of women’s asset ownership and control.

The survey, piloted by ICRW and its partners, University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa and Associates Research Uganda Ltd., is one of the first to undertake a quantitative assessment of men’s and women’s rights over a range of assets from land and housing to material goods such as mobile phones and farming tools. ICRW’s Krista Jacobs and Meredith Saggers shared the results at a seminar held June 23 in Washington, D.C. (see the presentation).

The findings are an important addition to the international development field, where asset and property rights for women are increasingly seen as key to economic progress. However, women continue to own just a fraction of land worldwide, and despite laws that protect their rights to property, men and women often are unaware of them. Meanwhile, prevailing social norms reinforce attitudes that discourage women from owning land or other assets.

ICRW aimed to gain a better understanding of the issue through GLAS as well as another property rights-related project in Uganda: A community-based program in the rural Luwero District that educated people on existing laws and helped mediate property disputes. ICRW and its local partners, Uganda Land Alliance (ULA) and Centre for Basic Research, trained rights workers and their communities on women’s legal rights to property and promoted discussion around how these rights were or were not realized. The nine-month pilot showed modest achievements.

As for GLAS, researchers conducted the survey in three rural and urban sites in Uganda and South Africa, to provide a multidimensional look at the gap between men’s and women’s asset ownership. The findings confirmed that men own more than women and also control more decisions about assets. More so, women’s ability to own assets is strongly influenced by their male partners.

Among married or cohabiting couples, responses about joint ownership revealed differing perceptions between men and women. For example, in rural Uganda, 19 percent of women said they jointly owned a house with the male head of household, while only 3 percent of men reported shared ownership.

When female respondents were divided into two groups, female-headed households and women in male-headed households, results showed that asset ownership among women heads was comparable to their male counterparts. In rural South Africa, 86 percent of men and 84 percent of women who lead households owned a home. In contrast, only 22 percent of women in male-headed households reported such ownership. Researchers cautioned that although women who head households appeared to own assets, the survey sample may have only captured more resilient women. Still, the findings point to the need for further understanding on how gender norms affect women’s ability to own and make decisions about various assets.

“Women’s asset rights are largely shaped by their position in the household and by their relationships,” said Jacobs, who led the research. “These power structures should be top of mind when shaping policies and programs about land, economic development and women’s empowerment.”

The Gender, Asset and Land Survey instrument and manual will be available online in late July 2011. Join our e-newsletter to receive regular updates from ICRW.

How Do Community-based Legal Programs Work

How Do Community-based Legal Programs Work
Understanding the Process and Benefits of a Pilot Program to Advance Women’s Property Rights in Uganda

Krista Jacobs, Meredith Saggers, Sophie Namy
2011

Women’s property rights, especially access to land, are increasingly recognized as critical to achieving poverty reduction and gender equality. Research shows that community-based legal aid programs are a viable approach to improving legal knowledge and women’s access to legal resources to address property issues. From 2009-2010, the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) and the Uganda Land Alliance (ULA) implemented and evaluated a pilot program to strengthen women’s property rights.

This report describes the pilot program’s implementation, outcomes and lessons. It details the program design, methodologies for monitoring and evaluation, and the context in which the program was implemented. Findings include a discussion of challenges encountered by the rights workers and overall program achievements. And recommendations for community rights work as an approach to promoting women’s property rights also are included.

(1.25 MB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

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Monitoring Toolkit

Monitoring Toolkit
How to Develop a Monitoring System for a Community Rights Workers Program

By Meredith Saggers and Krista Jacobs
2011

This toolkit is designed to introduce the reader to project monitoring and why it is an essential component of any community rights workers program. The reader is taken through a step-by-step process to develop a monitoring system. By following these steps, the reader can create a monitoring system specific to her/his own program. A land rights organization in Uganda used this toolkit to design a monitoring system for its community rights workers program in Luwero district. Its experience is used as an example throughout the toolkit to provide a real-world illustration of the process. Though qualitative monitoring and feedback sessions with rights workers are also important sources of valuable information, this toolkit focuses on quantitative monitoring to understand the program and community needs.

(567.65 KB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

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The Power of Mediation

Community Volunteers Help Mediate Land Disputes

Land is a precious resource in Uganda, and agriculture is the main livelihood for most families, especially in rural areas like Luwero District in central Uganda. In recent years conflicts over land have become more prevalent due to a growing population, rising land values and confusion over the country’s land laws.

Women Find Freedom Through Land Ownership

Mon, 11/08/2010
MediaGlobal

MediaGlobal reports on the importance of increasing land ownership for women as a means to ending the cycle of poverty in the developing world. ICRW economist Krista Jacobs comments on the cumulative benefits of ensuring that women realize their land rights. 

Property Rights and Gender: A Training Toolkit

Property Rights and Gender: A Training Toolkit

International Center for Research on Women and Uganda Land Alliance
2010

Property rights economically empower women by creating opportunities for earning income, securing their place in the community and ensuring their livelihoods. This toolkit seeks to strengthen understanding of property rights for women and men as equal citizens. In Uganda, where this toolkit was piloted, women often are not treated as equal citizens, and the toolkit addresses what rights women have, how to communicate women’s rights and the issues preventing women from exercising their rights.

The overarching goals of the training are to:

  • Increase knowledge of legal rights to property in Uganda
  • Understand and recognize women’s and men’s equality before Ugandan law
  • Allow women and men to exercise and protect their own property rights while respecting others’ rights

The toolkit has five modules:

Rights and Gender in Uganda
Land Law and Gender
Property Rights in Marriage and Family
Inheritance Law, Wills and Women
Monitoring Skills for the Community Rights Worker

(9.68 MB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

Terms and Conditions »

Women's Property Rights 101

Owning property can be a woman’s ticket out of poverty. But few women understand their right to property or how to demand it. Economist Krista Jacobs of the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) explains how owning property and assets benefit not just women, but their communities, too.

Training Grassroots Paralegals to Help Women Exercise Their Property Rights

Grassroots paralegals are community-based volunteers who provide legal education and legal aid. Grassroots paralegals can be an important ally in ensuring that women exercise their right to property and assets. ICRW and Uganda Land Alliance have been working together to develop, use, and disseminate training curricula and field tools for paralegals on gender and property rights and to deliver key messages about women’s property rights to both paralegals and their communities.

ICRW also worked to build the ability of Uganda Land Alliance and the grassroots paralegals to document their cases to assess over time patterns in cases and communities’ needs, understand who their clients are, and identify successful approaches to handling cases. Regular process evaluation exercises focus on knowledge gaps in communities, building paralegals’ knowledge of women’s property rights, paralegals’ working relationships with local leaders, and increasing local awareness of the paralegals as a resource. Lessons learned from these efforts will increase the effectiveness of training programs as ICRW and local partners promote grassroots paralegal efforts throughout Africa.

Duration: 
2007 - 2013
Location(s): 
Uganda

Measuring Property Rights: Gender, Land and Asset Survey

The Gender, Land and Asset Survey was developed and piloted by ICRW and its partners, Associates Research Uganda, Limited and the University of KwaZulu-Natal to measure the full spectrum of women’s and men’s property rights – including ownership, use, control and decision making over land, housing and productive assets, such as small farm equipment. The first round of the survey interviewed more than 2,000 men and women in South Africa and Uganda about their relationship to property. The survey was able to quantitatively demonstrate differences not only in women’s and men’s ownership of assets but also differences in documentation and decision-making and point to different socioeconomic factors and life-cycle stages that influence women’s property rights. The second round of the Gender, Land and Asset Survey focuses on understanding the nature of ownership, use, and decision-making within couples living in a context of customary land tenure.

As a pioneer in the effort to quantify women’s property rights on a large scale, ICRW is using the findings of this survey to demonstrate the links among property rights, women's empowerment and domestic violence; to promote more widespread and rigorous measurement of gendered asset rights; and to identify policies that can improve women's rights over land and assets.

Related Resources

Duration: 
2007 - 2013
Location(s): 
South Africa
Location(s): 
Uganda
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