Could Mapping Initiatives Catalyze the Interpretation of Customary Land Rights in Ways that Secure Women’s Land Rights?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Women and Land Tenure Vulnerability in Customary Tenure Areas
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Overall Justification for Mapping Initiatives in Customary Land Areas
3.2. Institutional Arrangements for Mapping Initiatives
3.3. Legal Status of the Mapping Outputs
3.4. Impact of Customary Land Mapping on Women’s Customary Land Rights
3.5. Limits of Mapping for Securing Women’s Land Tenure in Customary Areas
4. Recommendations for Improving on the Practice and Scaling-Up of Mapping Initiatives
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Country | Nature of Intervention | The way Mapping was Part of Intervention | Sources Available on the Intervention |
---|---|---|---|
Liberia International Development Law Organization (IDLO) | Gather evidence relating to the type and level of support that communities require to successfully complete community land titling. | Mapping was a major part to facilitate the protection of vulnerable groups’ land rights in the context of decentralized land management and administration. | Inception report Reviewed publication |
Lesotho Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) | Review of Lesotho land administration to assess the land administration situation and to propose areas for legal reform. | Mapping was used in resettlement, compensation, verification and adjudication of land rights. Gender considerations were included from the outset of the land-related portion of the project. | End of Project Technical Report |
Benin MCC | Project aimed to create secure land tenure and effective and transparent governance of land. | Mapping was an integral part of a project that aimed at improving women’s access to land and the security of women’s land tenure. | |
Democratic People’s Republic of Congo REDD+ | Community involvement in mapping for conservation, planning, and management of land tenure. | Major part of the intervention. Women included in awareness sessions to ensure a participatory process. Women targeted in training in cartography. | Self-reporting by the Project Management Team Research report |
South Africa | Digital mapping in marginalized communities to inform land-use decision-making. | Major part of co-constructing knowledge with communities. | 2 Peer reviewed articles |
Rwanda International Fund for Agriculture Development (IFAD) supported | Mapping land and natural resource right, use management of natural resources. | Strengthening of land tenure security through the facilitation of statutory land registration. Major to strengthen land use planning. Strengthening women’s land rights was a major theme of the intervention. | Project self-report /learning note Conference report Peer reviewed Project evaluation report |
Mozambique MCC IDLO | Support communities to acquire documentation to secure their communal lands. Gather evidence relating to the type and level of support that communities require to successfully complete community land titling. | Provide support to communities in the process of mapping their lands. | Peer reviewed publication Technical report Inception report |
Uganda IFAD supported International Land Coalition supported | Community mapping to ensure tenure security customary land rights. | Major precondition to secure statutory registration of communal land. Women inclusion precondition for registration. | Best Practice self- report by NGO 3 peer reviewed journal articles |
Madagascar ILC Supported | Mapping land use and natural resource management to facilitate customary land registration. | Major intervention. Strengthening women’s access to land a major theme. | Learning note Conference report Best practice report Peer reviewed report |
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Paradza, G.; Mokwena, L.; Musakwa, W. Could Mapping Initiatives Catalyze the Interpretation of Customary Land Rights in Ways that Secure Women’s Land Rights? Land 2020, 9, 344. https://doi.org/10.3390/land9100344
Paradza G, Mokwena L, Musakwa W. Could Mapping Initiatives Catalyze the Interpretation of Customary Land Rights in Ways that Secure Women’s Land Rights? Land. 2020; 9(10):344. https://doi.org/10.3390/land9100344
Chicago/Turabian StyleParadza, Gaynor, Lebogang Mokwena, and Walter Musakwa. 2020. "Could Mapping Initiatives Catalyze the Interpretation of Customary Land Rights in Ways that Secure Women’s Land Rights?" Land 9, no. 10: 344. https://doi.org/10.3390/land9100344
APA StyleParadza, G., Mokwena, L., & Musakwa, W. (2020). Could Mapping Initiatives Catalyze the Interpretation of Customary Land Rights in Ways that Secure Women’s Land Rights? Land, 9(10), 344. https://doi.org/10.3390/land9100344