Interwoven Landscapes: Gender and Land in the Kafue Flats, Zambia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Coloniality of Gender and Land Rights
1.2. Land and the Collective Ownership of Common Pool Resources (CPRs)
1.3. Land Tenure Systems in Zambia
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results: Reanalysis from a Gender Perspective
3.1. Gender and Land Tenure Change in the Kafue Flats
‘After the introduction of the plough [in the 1950s] most of the women had no chance of getting a field and especially when they sold the maize at the market, all the fields were taken away by the men.’(CR, 2004, Kafue Flats)
3.2. Inheritance of Land: The Flexibility of Customary Tenure
“I didn’t want to leave my father’s village because I am the firstborn in the family, even though I am a woman. And we are just born two. So when my father passed away the name of my father was given to my young brother. … [My father’s relatives] could have taken the land since my brother was young. That’s why I wanted to stay. … Otherwise it would have been difficult to get the land back. So I fought hard not to leave the place until my brother was grown and married. … As long as I stay alone with my brother at my father’s village I can take my children to school”.(VJ, 2010)
“I met a man and I went out with him, I got pregnant,—my grandmother gave me a field, and I kept pigs and stayed with my grandmother until I had my first [serious] boyfriend”.(FJ, 2010)
3.3. Privatization: Ambiguous Alternative to Customary Tenure
“The disadvantage is that this land, where they grow sugar cane, in the past they used this land for farming maize. Nowadays people don’t have places to plant maize, unless they buy [land]. … Nowadays people just buy [maize] as if they are in an urban area”. Her mother added: “That time [before the outgrower scheme], we never used to buy land. We were just given, for free. This time we buy, and the prices are just too high.”.(BJ and daughter, 2018)
3.4. Agricultural Commons and Satellite Land Owners
3.5. Living of the Land: Cattle and Grazing Areas
3.6. Living of the Land: Wildlife, Wild Plants and Fish
3.7. Multiple Ontologies
4. Discussion
4.1. Women and Land Ownership between Customary Tenure and Private Property
4.2. Women’s Access to CPR and Multiple Ontologies
4.3. Limitations
4.4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Cattle | Agriculture | Fishing | Hunting | Gathering | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Start of the rainy season | Men bringing back their cattle to the village from the cattle camp in the plain (kubola) | Men prepare the field, and women cultivate it | Collective fishing: women fish with baskets, and men fish with spears, hooks and fish traps | Men hunt individually in the village or in the chichi | Women/men (boys) collect fruits |
Inundation period | Men herding cattle in the woodlands during the rainy season | Weeding, early harvest | Women fish with baskets, and men fish with spears, hooks and fish traps | Men: collective hunting (chila) | Women/men (boys) collect fruits |
Early dry season | Cattle herded in harvested fields and later driven to cattle camps in the floodplain (kuwila) | No activity or only small gardens on the river | Fishing ends, later joint fishing in ponds | No hunting in the floodplain, only hunting in village areas | Women collect wild plants |
Late dry season | Livestock herded by men in cattle camps in the floodplain | No activity | Men fish in ponds near cattle camps, mutual and joint fishing days | No hunting in the floodplain, only hunting in village areas | Women collect wild plants |
Institutional Framing | Ownership and Distribution | Technologies and Use | Ontology/Spiritual Notion | ||
Agricultural Land | Oral history, 20th century | Common property: Agricultural land was conceived as “ancestral land” tied to clans or families, not individuals. With colonialization, the most common rules to allocate land were formalized in ‘customary laws’. | Conquest of land led to ownership; power to distribute land was in the hands of the clan head. No notion of permanent individual ownership, distribution within the group was flexible. Women and men had access to land through their fathers or maternal uncles (bilaterally); men also through the fathers of their wives; women lost access to land from the paternal line upon marriage, passing to the husband’s clan. Maize harvests were considered a collective good, and other crops were distributed by women. | Land was used for agriculture, grazing, hunting, fishing and gathering. Soil cultivation was done with hoes by men and women; weeding, harvesting and threshing were predominantly performed by women. Intercropping, combining millet, sorghum and maize with beans, peanuts, etc. was a technology of women who also grew sorghum for local beer production. Men built granaries, and storage was partly under their control. | Property was conceptualized as a notion of belonging through sacred sites, such as ancestral spirit sites, burial sites, sacred anthills, rain ritual sites, etc. Land and CPRs were the common property of humans and spiritual beings in the environment (animistic/totemistic ontologies). Men were the guardians of maize seeds and always carried them with them. Magic accelerated the growth of the plants; rain shrines were also controlled by men. |
Observations 2002, 2009, 2018 | Statutory law: All rights to land were held by the president, either as private, customary, or government land. Agricultural policies shaped local production: Partially subsidized crop cultivation, sometimes gender-specific, separate subsidy programs for smallholders. | Customary land continued to be administered by chiefs and headmen, and ownership tied to lineage. Since 1995 men and women could acquire leasehold and freehold titles for customary land, even though women rarely did. Women were still expected to work in their husbands’ fields, but in principle they had the right to own fields under customary law and through leasehold titles. | After the introduction of the plow in the 1950s, men worked the land, and women sowed. The production of cash crops was individualized, and increasing pressure for good agricultural land limited access. No more intercropping, instead conversion to hybrid maize monoculture; no long-term storage possible. After the introduction of the plow in the 1950s, men worked the land, and women sowed. The production of cash crops was individualized, and increasing pressure for good agricultural land limited access. No more intercropping, instead conversion to hybrid maize monoculture; no long-term storage possible. | Sacred places, especially graves, continued to be important for a sense of belonging and land ownership. Rain sanctuaries; magical practices were performed to improve crop harvests. | |
Institutional Framing | Ownership and Distribution | Technologies and Use | Ontology/Spiritual Notion | ||
Flora: pasture, forest | Oral history, 20th century | Common pool resources: Access to grazing land was granted by the guardian of an area. Trees and certain plants and areas were safeguarded by different families. | A specific clan distributed access to pastures; trees used for canoe building also belonged to one family. Medicinal and edible wild plants were collected by both men and women. | Herding was performed by young men. Mainly children collected wild plants, vegetables and leaves (collectively). Women gathered firewood and edible plants. Men cut wood for construction. | Sacred places, e.g., anthills required specific rituals to protect livestock in the floodplain, e.g., from predators. Milk was not sold (taboo). Clans had sacred trees and used clan-specific medicinal plants. |
Observations 2002, 2009, 2018 | Trend toward privatization/free access (absentee herd owners) for pastures; large-scale land acquisition by external actors; weak control led to overuse. | Land ownership: Few men benefitted from land rentals or sales; the majority lost access to grazing land. Women lost access to grazing land for small livestock and to forest products. Leasehold titles: Mostly men received land titles. | Men took over herding the animals. Fewer women had access to grazing land. Commercialization of milk: Sale performed by men. Women collected firewood and edible plants; men and women collected medicinal plants. | Milk was no longer sacred and was commodified. Rituals to protect cattle in the floodplains were still performed. Trees were no longer spiritually protected, and there were fewer medicinal plants due to the loss of sacred places. | |
Fauna: wildlife, fish | Oral history, 20th century | Collective use of common pool resources. | Hunting rights were granted by headmen and the chiefs. Fishing was under the control of chiefs; access rights for men and women. Fishing with boats (and nets) was only performed by Lozi or Batwa men, rights granted by Ila chiefs. | Hunting was performed mostly collectively, occasionally individually near villages. Men hunted, and women preserved the meat. Women fished mainly during the rainy season with baskets; men fished with spears and fish traps; men fished occasionally and by invitation. Drying fish was performed by women. | Some animals were taboo; some areas and times were taboo for fishing. The river guardian controlled the spirit of the rivers. Fishing had to be opened with a ritual to protect spawning areas and to ensure the abundance of fish. Rituals also served to keep crocodiles away. |
Observations 2002, 2009, 2018 | Wild animals are under the control of the Zambian Wildlife Authority. Government regulations introduced by the Ministry of Fisheries and Livestock. | Abolition of traditional hunting, introduction of GMA, national parks and licenses. slosing season overlapped with the time when subsistence fishing was most important to poorer households, taking no account of women’s pre-colonial access rights. | Men usually hunted, and women dried and partly sold the meat. Women also fished for subsistence during the closed season, and men and women alike sold fish. Women played a large role in the processing and sale of fish. | The taboo of fishing in some waters at certain times was not respected any more, especially for young men starting to fish with baskets before collective fishing was opened. Rituals to keep crocodiles away continued to exist |
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Merten, S.; Haller, T. Interwoven Landscapes: Gender and Land in the Kafue Flats, Zambia. Land 2023, 12, 1657. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12091657
Merten S, Haller T. Interwoven Landscapes: Gender and Land in the Kafue Flats, Zambia. Land. 2023; 12(9):1657. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12091657
Chicago/Turabian StyleMerten, Sonja, and Tobias Haller. 2023. "Interwoven Landscapes: Gender and Land in the Kafue Flats, Zambia" Land 12, no. 9: 1657. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12091657
APA StyleMerten, S., & Haller, T. (2023). Interwoven Landscapes: Gender and Land in the Kafue Flats, Zambia. Land, 12(9), 1657. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12091657