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Community Organizations Landesa - Rural Development Institute
Landesa - Rural Development Institute
Landesa - Rural Development Institute
Non Governmental organization

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info@landesa.org
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About Landesa


Landesa partners with governments and local organizations to ensure that the world’s poorest families have secure rights over the land they till. Founded as the Rural Development Institute, Landesa has helped more than 105 million poor families gain legal control over their land since 1967. When families have secure rights to land, they can invest in their land to sustainably increase their harvests and reap the benefits—improved nutrition, health, and education—for generations.

Members:

Tyler Roush
Chris Jochnick
Diana Fletschner

Resources

Displaying 56 - 60 of 107

Issue Brief: Land Tenure As a Critical Consideration for Climate Change-Related Displacement in Slow-Onset Disaster Zones

Policy Papers & Briefs
mei, 2017
Global

 As climate change impacts intensify, growing rates of natural disasters cause increasing damage to the lives of people across the globe. Climate change-related disasters include both rapid-onset disasters (such as hurricanes) and slow-onset disasters (such as long-term droughts). Given the urgency of rapidonset disasters, it is unsurprising that governments, multi-lateral organizations, donors and others target a large percentage of resources towards rapid-onset events related to climate change.


Gender & Collectively Held Land. Good Practices and Lessons Learned from Six Global Case Studies

Reports & Research
december, 2016
Africa

Seeks to answer the question, where collective tenure arrangements are either being formalized or supported for the sake of securing the community’s rights to land, what steps are required to strengthen women’s land rights in the process? Synthesizes findings from case studies in China, Ghana, India, the Kyrgyz Republic, Namibia, and Peru that assess interventions to strengthen collective tenure and ensure that both women and men benefit from improved land tenure security.

SYNTHESIS REPORT – GENDER & COLLECTIVELY HELD LAND

Reports & Research
november, 2016
Namibia
Ghana
Peru
Kyrgyzstan
China
Global

GOOD PRACTICES AND LESSONS LEARNED FROM SIX GLOBAL CASE STUDIES

Many studies have shown the benefits to women of secure rights to land: when their rights are secure, their status in the community and within the household can increase, their income can increase, and they and their families are less likely to be underweight or malnourished.

Ghana: Gender and the Land Access and Tenure Security Project

Reports & Research
augustus, 2016
Ghana
Africa

Case study identifies good practices and lessons learned about including gender in a project designed to sensitize communities about the importance of securing land rights, build capacity of customary land secretariats, and provide alternative dispute resolution training to traditional authorities in the Northern Region of Ghana.

Namibia: Good Practices and Lessons Learned for Gender and Communal Land

Reports & Research
augustus, 2016
Namibia
Africa

Focuses on communal land and attempts to better understand the intersection of gender, communal land, and land reform in Namibia. Concentrates on two regions that adopted different approaches. The Oshana region leads the implementation of the nationwide Communal Land Reform Act, 2002, that introduced the registration of customary land rights in communal areas, while the Kavango region declined to participate in this and instead continues to independently administer customary land rights in accordance with its established customary system.