Votre recherche
Résultats 2 ressources
-
Ce cahier présente un premier état des lieux du développement inclusif par le genre (DIG) et brosse le portrait des sources de données internationales et institutionnelles existantes et accessibles au sujet du développement inclusif afin d’outiller l’Observatoire et de soutenir ses partenaires dans leur volonté de se saisir de cette problématique de l’égalité et de participer concrètement aux défis qui en découlent. En répertoriant les sources de données existantes, en analysant leurs caractéristiques et leurs lacunes ainsi qu’en identifiant les angles morts dans la couverture des dimensions inégalitaires persistantes au sein des secteurs clés du DIG (milieux économiques, systèmes éducatifs, domaine de l’enseignement supérieur et de la recherche ), nous cernons des enjeux qui sont au cœur de la mission de l’Observatoire.
-
Evidence shows that secure land rights have positive effects on poor people in general and women in particular, especially where households previously had little security. Several countries in Africa have been undertaking land reform initiatives that prohibit gender-based discrimination; however, the results revealed a substantial gap between the development of laws and their effective implementation. This paper draws attention to the political systems within which land tenure and property rights operate, especially for women. It also points out the main challenges in securing women’s land rights in Africa and highlights the economic, social and environmental benefits of increasing women’s access to land. The analysis shows that although many of the changes in policy and law appear to be legal and technical, access to and control over land is in practice related to socio-economic characteristics and governed by cultural practices and power relations at the family, community and country levels. The paper therefore recognizes the need for innovative approaches that go beyond property rights in operationalising strategies that strengthen women’s access to land. It is not enough for land legislation to be gender-sensitive; it must be gender-transformational. Land markets could potentially contribute to this transformation but their role is still limited by poor institutional capacity. The roles that different actors (women, men, women’s organizations, community leaders, donors) can play would be crucial in the process of securing women’s access to land in Africa.