Creating Equal Ground: Conversation with Indigenous Women Leaders on the Challenges and Approaches for Securing Women’s Land and Natural Resource Rights | Land Portal
Organizers: 
Resource Equity

Resource Equity is a women-run and women-centered nonprofit organization that focuses exclusively on legal issues specific to gender equity in land and natural resources around the world.


Language of the event: 
English
Spanish
French

April 13, 2021
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM EDT
Online

 

This event will be available in English, French, and Spanish.

Cet événement sera disponible en anglais, français et espagnol: Lire la description de l'événement

Este evento estará disponible en inglés, francés y español: Leer la descripción del evento


Making up more than half of the world’s over 3 billion rural population, women in indigenous and customary communities rely on communal lands and resources for their livelihoods and well-being. Access and rights to land and natural resources enable women to ensure the sustenance and welfare of their families, increase productivity, and help drive local economies.

Yet despite the key roles they play in their communities, women tend to have less access and fewer rights to land and resources. Merely 14% of agricultural landowners globally are women, and even in indigenous groups with collective ownership of land and resources, women may lack secure land rights. This hampers their ability to fulfill their roles and cope during times of crisis.

Join WRI for an in-depth discussion with indigenous women leaders from different regions around the world. Moderated by the authors of a recent WRI report on women's land tenure, On Equal Ground: Promising Practices for Realizing Women’s Rights in Collectively Held Lands, this conversation will dive into their experiences and the lessons they’ve learned for how to secure and scale women’s rights to communal lands and resources.

This event will be available in English, French, and Spanish.

Speakers

Myrna Cunningham Kain, member of the indigenous Miskito community of Waspam, Chairperson, Center for Autonomy and Development of Indigenous People (CADPI), and President, Fund for the Development of the Indigenous Peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean (FILAC)

Joan Carling, indigenous activist from the Cordillera, Philippines, Director, Indigenous Peoples Rights International, and Co-convenor of the Indigenous Peoples’ Major Group for Sustainable Development-IPMG

Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, member of Chad’s pastoralist Mbororo community, President, Association for Indigenous Women and Peoples of Chad (AFPAT), Conservation International Senior Fellow, and Earthshot Prize Council member

Celine Salcedo-La VinaResearch Associate II and Land Tenure Specialist, World Resources Institute (moderator)

 

Renee GiovarelliCo-founder, Senior Advisor and Lawyer, Resource Equity (moderator)

 
 
Related content: 
Blog post
5 Lessons for Securing Women’s Collective Land Rights
Cameroon
Mexico
Nepal
Jordan
Global

The ability to own land and access natural resources allows women to secure food for their families, increase their agricultural productivity and livelihoods, and help drive local economies. Land rights empower women to have a say in matters that affect their lives, families and communities — everything from deciding what crops to plant to investing in children’s education and health.

Library Resource
On Equal Ground: Promising Practices for Realizing Women’s Rights in Collectively Held Lands
Reports & Research
February, 2021
Africa, Mexico, Indonesia

Sustainable land governance requires that all members of a community, both women and men, have equal rights and say in decisions that affect their collectively-held lands. Unfortunately, women around the world have less land ownership and weaker land rights than men – but this can change, and this report shows ways how that can be done.

Library Resource
On Equal Ground: Promising Practices for Realizing Women’s Rights in Collectively Held Lands
Reports & Research
February, 2021
Africa, Mexico, Indonesia

La gobernanza sostenible de la tierra requiere que todos los miembros de una comunidad, tanto mujeres como hombres, tengan los mismos derechos y voz en las decisiones que afectan a sus tierras de propiedad colectiva. Lamentablemente, las mujeres de todo el mundo tienen menos  tierra en propiedad y derechos más débiles que los hombres, pero esto puede cambiar, y este informe muestra cómo hacerlo.