Women鈥檚 Land Rights and COVID-19
By Karol Boudreaux
In the six months since the coronavirus began its global spread, more than 15 million people have been diagnosed with COVID-19 and more than 600,000 have perished, causing governments around the world to institute lockdowns and shut down businesses while entire industries have been devastated. This brief, inspired by and sourced heavily from the Land Portal鈥檚 webinar and discussion series, spotlights a selection of these challenges, and provides suggestions for how they may be addressed.
The Challenge
The COVID-19 crisis threatens the lives and livelihoods of millions. As family members become ill or die, as work burdens increase, as migrants return to rural areas, pressure on land鈥攊ncluding women鈥檚 land rights鈥攔ises. Major concerns include:
- Many women .聽However, few women formally own land and have laws that limit women鈥檚 property rights. Forty-four than men when it comes to inheriting property. Daughters who lose fathers may also and so lose an opportunity to acquire assets they control.
- Discriminatory social norms make it difficult for women to exercise formal land and property rights. Although women regularly manage land and provide approximately 43 percent of the world鈥檚 agricultural labor, and the proceeds that come from using land. With less access to as compared to men, women who lose husbands or sons face extra hurdles to becoming successful farmers. In some countries, sets the stage for the loss of land, as fallow lands can be seen as underproductive and can be reallocated to someone else.
- finds that as many as 480 million women feel their land and property rights are insecure.聽Married women, the survey finds, feel especially vulnerable to eviction after a husband鈥檚 death or after divorce. If women lose husbands to COVID-19, they need to grow food crops or to provide shelter for their children.聽As women either get sick themselves or tend to sick family members, their ability to till, weed, and harvest crops and care for animals decreases. Secure land rights can help protect women from displacement, improve access to services and help them rebuild their lives after a crisis like a pandemic.
Early Responses and Key Considerations
Immediate Recommendations
During the pandemic, governments and communities can take steps to reduce the land-related risks women face, namely:
- Gather data on the specific impacts of the pandemic on women鈥檚 land and housing rights:聽Municipal, regional, and/or national governments can work with local organizations, including women鈥檚 groups, to gather data about the specific impacts the pandemic is having on women鈥檚 land and housing rights. This could take the form of rapid surveys to determine if women are being threatened with displacement, or are being displaced or evicted, by family members or others (landlords, governments) when someone in the family falls ill. Governments and relief organizations could use data to improve the targeting of assistance and establish rapid response mechanisms to counter dispossession and eviction.聽聽
- Enable access to services: It is important that women be able to register land claims either jointly with spouses, family members or in collective groups, or as sole owners. But during the pandemic some governments have shut down land offices. To support women who wish to register claims, governments should consider keeping offices open and view them as essential services.聽
- Be on the lookout for fraudulent transfers: During lockdowns, officials should be trained to be on the lookout for fraudulent transactions that involve . When family members pass away or when women are not able to travel to defend their rights, others with better access to land offices may file claims for women鈥檚 land. The Tanzania Widows Association is working with COVID-19 widows and to help protect them from eviction and displacement by formalizing their land rights. The mobile application (Law on Your Palm) is providing Tanzanian women with access to free legal advice related to land鈥攕o they do not need to travel.
Longer-Term Recommendations
Medium to longer-term steps that can help reduce risks to women鈥檚 land rights include:
- Identify and address discriminatory gaps in the legal framework: Governments can work with researchers and civil society to identify specific provisions of family laws, including inheritance and matrimonial laws, and other laws that and propose new language to harmonize these laws.聽
- Support women鈥檚 collective farming and production opportunities:聽When it becomes difficult for women to farm their land, because they are widows, have a sick husband or son, or are ill themselves, an important alternative can be , which allows women to spread risks and share benefits. Legal frameworks should enable this voluntary approach, including by supporting equitable land leasing.聽
- Close the digital gender divide to enable women to use online land platforms: As more land administration, agricultural extension and financial services move online, women can be left behind due to the digital gender divide. To protect women鈥檚 land rights in those countries with online service platforms, governments can track data on women鈥檚 secure access to and use of technology, promote digital literacy through schools and work with local NGOs, civil society organizations and women鈥檚 groups, and create and for women to use the internet.聽
- Activate men as allies to strengthen women鈥檚 land rights: In the longer term, to protect and promote women鈥檚 land rights from the pressures associated with pandemics and other crises, it is to support social change that empower women and their families.