secure land rights for women and men in the post-2015 agenda 1 d. hien tran december 10, 2013 odi...
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Secure Land Rightsfor Women and Men
in the Post-2015 Agenda
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D. Hien TranDecember 10, 2013ODI Roundtable – The Possible Shape of a Land Transparency Initiative
A Look Back: Millennium Development Goals and Rights to Land and Property
Land and property rights effectively not included in the Millennium Development Goals
• Eradicating hunger and poverty• Achieving gender equality• Ensuring environmental sustainability
A “missing dimension” of the MDGs – lack of secure rights to land, particular for women, is an obstacle to achieving several MDGs, including:
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Landesa’s Post-2015 Advocacy
Post-2015 Advocacy Goal
The inclusion of targets and indicators on secure land rights for women and men in the post-2015 framework
Unique window of opportunity to make the case
Inclusion in the post-2015 framework creates an environment of urgency, incentive, and pressure for governments to address land
rights for women and men
Post-2015 Recent Developments
• Adopted September 25, 2013• UN member states agree to a roadmap for developing
and adopting a post-2015 framework
Outcome Document
• A single framework and set of goals applicable to all countries, taking into account national circumstances
• Process of intergovernmental negotiations to launch at 69th UNGA session in September 2014
• High-level Summit to adopt a new set of goals in September 2015
Key Points of Agreement
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Growing Momentum
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Post-2015 Report Proposed Goals Proposed Secure Land Rights-Related Targets
High-Level Panel End Poverty Empower girls and women and achieve gender equality
Increase by x% the share of women and men, communities, and businesses with secure rights to land, property, and other assets Ensure equal right of women to own and inherit property, sign a contract, register a business and open a bank account
Sustainable Development Solutions Network
Improve agricultural systems and raise rural prosperity
Ensure universal access in rural areas to basic resources and infrastructure services (land, water, sanitation, modern energy, transport, mobile and broadband communication, agricultural inputs, and advisory services)
UN Global Compact Achieve women and girls’ empowerment
Full and equal access of women to ownership, property rights and land titles
Growing Momentum
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Post-2015 Report Secure land and property rights
Participate StudyReview of 84 participatory studies based on views of those living in extreme poverty
“Priority should be given to ensuring basic needs relating to food, sanitation and land rights as without these the poorest cannot access services such as education.”
UN Secretary General’s Report
Transformative actions needed include:Empower women and girls. Among other things, women and girls must have “the right to own land and other assets.”
Open Working Group Interim Report
“[A] lasting solution to the scourges of poverty and hunger must include raising smallholder productivity and rural incomes on a sustainable basis. This will require greater investments in agricultural research and rural infrastructure, as well as measures to provide more secure access to land, credit, crop insurance and other productive inputs to smallholder farmers, especially women farmers.
Land and Governance in Post-2015
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• Governance discussion has been broader and not focused on land governance or any other area specifically.
• Discussion has focused on broader issues and concepts of :
• High-Level Panel Report Goal 10: Ensure good governance and effective institutions
– Provide free and universal legal identity, such as birth registrations– Ensure that people enjoy freedom of speech, association, peaceful protest and
access to independent media and information– Increase public participation in political processes and civic engagement at all
levels– Guarantee the public’s right to information and access to government data– Reduce bribery and corruption and ensure officials can be held accountable
rule of law accountability
transparency freedom of speech and media
access to justice open political choice
Land and Governance in Post-2015
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• There has been some discussion of land rights in the context of the rule of law, access to justice, and legal empowerment.
• UN Technical Support Team Issues Brief: Conflict Prevention, Post-conflict Peacebuilding and the Promotion of Durable Peace, Rule of Law and Governance:
• But the discussion on land rights focuses more on their role in helping to achieve goals related to poverty reduction, gender equality, food security, and environmental sustainability.
“It is now widely recognized that improved security of tenure for land and property is critical to ensure social and economic progress across rural and urban settings and that the rule of law facilitates the protection of land, property and other resource rights.”
Key Takeaways on “Why” Land/Property Rights in Post-2015 Framework
Broad array of actors recognize
that . . .
Secure rights to land and property
for women and men should be
explicitly included in the post-2015
agenda
Targets are included under several goals
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The cross-cutting nature of land and property rights for women and men represents a substantial opportunity:
Efforts to strengthen and enforce them can help achieve multiple goals in a post-2015 agenda.
Now – What should this look like?
Meaningful Measurable Simple
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Governments are still engaged in consultation process and seeking proposals for what targets and indicators could be used to show progress toward particular goals
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Targets: Accuracy, Inclusiveness, Clarity
• E.g., to sell, use, inherit, rather than ownership alone. Need to reflect different contexts.Range of rights
• Clearly defined, long-term, enforceable, appropriately transferable, and legally and socially legitimate. For women, should not require consultation or approval beyond that required of men.
Secure rights
• i.e., access to the system that confers, administers, supports, and enforces secure rights to land and property.
Access to secure rights
• Critical to call out women explicitly, otherwise potential exclusion when refer to households alone.
Women and men
• Rather than “tenure security” for accessibility.Land rights
Indicators: Guiding Principles
Reflect outcomes rather than inputs
Address several factors needed to achieve target
Measure what is critical, even if greater data collection required
Sex-disaggregated – women should be called out specifically
Limited in number
Relatively simple
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Possible Outcome-Focused Indicators in Post-2015 Context
• Reflects several elements: policy environment, institutional support and effectiveness, ability to obtain documents
• Document can reflect local context; should not be limited to ownership documents
• Can include documentation to community lands• Do not need exhaustive list of documents but have criteria for what
constitutes valid document
Documentation: Percentage of women and men with documented rights to land
• Proxy for people’s perception of tenure security• Investment in land decisions shaped by perception• Can reflect security experienced as individual, household, and
community• Can capture range of forced tenure changes
Perception: Percentage of women and men who do not fear arbitrary dispossession of land
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