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Women’s Land Rights in The Gambia. Securing Women’s Resource Rights through Gender Transformative Approaches

Women’s Land Rights in The Gambia. Securing Women’s Resource Rights through Gender Transformative Approaches
This socio-legal analysis provides an overview of existing land governance arrangements in The Gambia as they relate to women’s access to land and resources. It discusses two different types of land tenure interventions: title deeds and certification. These inventions vary according to different types of recognized rights-holders and the area in which rights are being formalized. Access to and control over land and other productive resources in The Gambia is shaped by complex tenure systems. Coexisting and interacting customary systems and statutory regulations are influenced by reform processes, with differentiated effects in rural and urban areas. Rights to resources are often negotiated across multiple rights-holders, overlapping tenure regimes and resource systems. Despite important progress through legislative reforms, implementation has been slow and prevailing barriers and gaps continue to influence the recognition of women’s land rights and their ability to benefit from them.
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DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17528/cifor/008262
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TI  - Women’s Land Rights in The Gambia. Securing Women’s Resource Rights through Gender Transformative Approaches 
AU  - Monterroso, I. 
AU  - Enokenwa, O. 
AU  - Paez-Valencia, A.M. 
AB  - This socio-legal analysis provides an overview of existing land governance arrangements in The Gambia as they relate to women’s access to land and resources. It discusses two different types of land tenure interventions: title deeds and certification. These inventions vary according to different types of recognized rights-holders and the area in which rights are being formalized. Access to and control over land and other productive resources in The Gambia is shaped by complex tenure systems. Coexisting and interacting customary systems and statutory regulations are influenced by reform processes, with differentiated effects in rural and urban areas. Rights to resources are often negotiated across multiple rights-holders, overlapping tenure regimes and resource systems. Despite important progress through legislative reforms, implementation has been slow and prevailing barriers and gaps continue to influence the recognition of women’s land rights and their ability to benefit from them. 
PY  - 2021 
PB  - CIFOR-ICRAF and International Fund for Agricultural Development 
PP  - Bogor, Indonesia and Nairobi, Kenya 
UR  - https://www.cifor-icraf.org/knowledge/publication/8262/ 
DO  - https://doi.org/10.17528/cifor/008262 
KW  - customary law, gender, land tenure, legal rights, rural communitiy, rural women 
ER  -
%T Women’s Land Rights in The Gambia. Securing Women’s Resource Rights through Gender Transformative Approaches 
%A Monterroso, I. 
%A Enokenwa, O. 
%A Paez-Valencia, A.M. 
%D 2021 
%I CIFOR-ICRAF and International Fund for Agricultural Development 
%C Bogor, Indonesia and Nairobi, Kenya 
%U https://www.cifor-icraf.org/knowledge/publication/8262/ 
%R https://doi.org/10.17528/cifor/008262 
%X This socio-legal analysis provides an overview of existing land governance arrangements in The Gambia as they relate to women’s access to land and resources. It discusses two different types of land tenure interventions: title deeds and certification. These inventions vary according to different types of recognized rights-holders and the area in which rights are being formalized. Access to and control over land and other productive resources in The Gambia is shaped by complex tenure systems. Coexisting and interacting customary systems and statutory regulations are influenced by reform processes, with differentiated effects in rural and urban areas. Rights to resources are often negotiated across multiple rights-holders, overlapping tenure regimes and resource systems. Despite important progress through legislative reforms, implementation has been slow and prevailing barriers and gaps continue to influence the recognition of women’s land rights and their ability to benefit from them. 
%K customary law 
%K gender 
%K land tenure 
%K legal rights 
%K rural communitiy 
%K rural women 
    Publisher

    CIFOR-ICRAF and International Fund for Agricultural Development: Bogor, Indonesia and Nairobi, Kenya

    Publication year

    2021

    Authors

    Monterroso, I.; Enokenwa, O.; Paez-Valencia, A.M.

    Language

    English

    Keywords

    customary law, gender, land tenure, legal rights, rural communitiy, rural women

    Geographic

    Gambia