Article of the Month -
October 2006
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Gender Dimensions of Land
Customary Inheritance underCustomary Tenure in Zambia
Ms. Nsame Nsemiwe, Zambia
This article in .pdf-format
1) This paper is based on the paper written and presented by Ms. Nsame
Nsemiwe at the XXIII FIG Congress in Munich, Germany, 8-13 October 2006.
The FIG Council has decided to award the Congress Prize to two papers
presented by Ms. Nsemiwe. The other paper is
"Negotiating the Interface: Struggles Involved in the Upgrading of
Informal Settlements -a Case Study of Nkandabwe in Kitwe, Zambia".
Keywords: Customary inheritance, customary tenure, access to land,
security of tenure, land distribution, land management, land administration,
women, poverty reduction
SUMMARY
Land is the focal point of economic growth and the most valuable asset on
earth as it is the source of all human survival. It is a resource that must
be properly managed in order to ensure that everyone in a particular society
benefits from its use and that uses of land are not environmentally damaging
and where possible contribute to the sustainable development and poverty
reduction in an economy. While we may have diverse problems related to land
all over the world especially in developing countries, secure tenure, access
to and ownership of land should be identified as a right of every human
being. Women are at the focal point of rural agriculture, development and
poverty reduction but the majority of them face serious constraints in
access to and control over land. Normally the right to access, ownership and
control over land are determined by patriarchal marriages and inheritance
systems that are prevalent in many developing nations which favour males
unlike their female counterparts in terms of the rights to control and
disposal.
In most countries land under customary tenure accounts for most of the
rural areas and according to the World Bank 2005 annual report, seventy
percent of the world's poor live in rural areas. The rural poor produce food
on land, build houses and depend on land for their social status and power.
Therefore, sustainable rural development must include agricultural
development which is truly enhanced by good land administration and
management. In the quest to promote rural development it is essential to
ensure that women have equal access rights to land knowing that women
account for half of the world's total population but only own 1% of the
world's wealth Rural women alone are responsible for half of the world’s
food production and between 60 and 80 percent of food production in most
developing countries. They are also the major implementers of most
developmental decisions and are a catalyst for sustainable development and
poverty reduction. To reduce hunger and poverty and promote sustainable
development, efforts must be made to address these inequalities
The role of a surveyor is thus very important in ensuring that people all
over the world have an opportunity to access or own land so as to contribute
to development and reduce poverty as their profession is closely tied to
land. The expertise of surveyors in planning, recording, distributing,
management and advice in decision making on land related issues is vital in
many economies especially those of developing countries. Surveyors can make
a difference in ensuring that every person in the world has access to and
can own land, and by so doing they will definitely contribute to the changes
going on in the world positively. The paper discusses customary inheritance
practices and their impact on distribution of land, access to land, security
of tenure and poverty reduction in areas under customary tenure or rural
areas.
1. INTRODUCTION
The task of managing land use and the earth’s resources is gaining
increasing importance due to the rising world population and economic
growth. Land is the basic resource for human survival and development and
all human activities such as mining, agriculture, tourism, building take
place on land. It also performs basic and fundamental functions that support
human and other terrastrial systems such as to produce food, fibre, fuel,
water or other biotic materials for human use: provides biological habitats
for plants, animals and micro-organisims: regulates the storage and flow of
surface and ground water; provides physical space for settlements, industry,
recreation and enable movement of animals, plants and people from one area
to another. One of the greatest writers on land – Henry George, who may also
be referred to as the foremost land economist, appreciated the value of land
and once remarked that "...land is the habitation of man, the store-house
upon which he must draw for all his needs, the material to which his labor
must be applied for the supply of all his desires; for even the products of
the sea cannot be taken, the light of the sun enjoyed, or any of the forces
of nature utilized, without the use of land or its products. On the land we
are born, from it we live, to it we return again- children of the soil as
truly as is the blade of grass or the flower of the field. Take away from
man all that belongs to land, and he is but a disembodied spirit" (George,
1879, rpt. 1958).
Mans life depends on land, thus any fight against poverty must give
highest priority to land issues such as its access, distribution,
management, administration, ownership and tenure security, especially in
developing countries.Due to various traditions, customs and culture
especially in Africa, it is a reality that there is inequality between men
and women in the control over, access to, ownership and management of land.
This is more prevalent in areas under customary tenure some of which may
also be referred to as rural areas where women may have less access to land
and tenure is not also very secure as compared to men and one of the factors
contributing to this is the inheritance practices that are present in some
of these areas.
2. RELEVANCE OF STUDY
The issue of customary inheritance practices related to land under
customary or traditional tenure disadvantaging womens access to land and
secure tenure has been hotly debated all over the world, but it still exists
and is very real, especially in Africa. Knowing that most areas that are
under customary tenure are mostly rural areas which in most cases lag behind
in development compared to urban areas it is important to find ways to
accelerate economic growth. The World Bank (2005a) reveals that both
experience and reserch show that for this acceleration to take place women
and men need to be helped to become equal partners in development, with an
equal voice and equal access to resouces. It indeed is right to say that
when we ensure equal land rights for men and women economic opportunities
will increase, investment wil be encouraged in land and food production as
well as improved family security during economic and social transition and
this will lead to better land stewardship (FAO, undated). Steinzor (2003)
argues that women’s lack of property and inheritance rights has been
increasingly linked to development-related problems faced by countries
across the globe, including low levels of education, hunger, and poor
health, therefore it is essential to continue discussing these issues until
marginal progress is achieved. In addition, the subject of women’s access to
land, has been discussed under Commission 7 of the International Federation
of Surveyors (FIG), within the general context of land administration. This
shows that there is still a need to address this issue and surveyors in
today’s world have got an important role to play to ensure that some of the
challenges related to land administration and management such as unfair
distribution of land, womens lack of access to land and lack of security of
tenure under customary tenure are overcome.
3. FEMINIZATION OF POVERTY
Poverty is the negative analogue of human development. It may manifest
itself in various ways which may include the lack of basic needs such as
food which causes hunger, proper health services and education system,
shelter or lack of adequate infrastructures. Poverty affects men and women
in different ways and this has led to the widespread emergence of phenomenas
such as ’ferminization of poverty’. Muylwijk (1995) describes ‘feminization
of poverty’ as the process of women losing rights to fertile land, access to
labour and other production resources and of the expansion of women’s
responsibilities in comparison to those of men.
The issue of globalization and the spread of the money economy to the
remotest communities such as rural areas, makes women more disadvantaged
because land becomes capital. Researchers such as Lee- Smith and Trujillo
(1999) have argued that women's lack of equal property rights with men is a
major cause of the feminization of poverty. This is definitely true and as
we try to reduce poverty it is essential that grass root causes of poverty
such as womens lack of access to land are addressed. The World Bank
President Mr . James D. Wolfensohn observed that where gender inequality
persists, efforts to reduce poverty are undermined and that numerous studies
and on-the-ground experiences have shown that promoting equality between men
and women helps economies grow faster, accelerates poverty reduction and
enhances the dignity and well being of men, women and children (The World
Bank, 2005b).
When we are fighting to reduce poverty we must ensure that it is coupled
with sustainable development, so as to make the efforts continue for a long
time. The 1987 Brundtland Report defined sustainable development as
development which meets the needs of the present without compromising the
ability of future generations to meet their own needs. Sustainable
development therefore entails using resources to the maximum and this calls
for effectiveness in delivering desired resources. The final edition of the
Report on the Bathurst declaration also makes this very clear by stating in
its executive summary that without effective access to property, economies
are unable to progress and the goal of sustainable development cannot be
realised and it lists womens access to land as one of the overall, most
serious problems facing the relationship between land and people. Therefore,
for sustainable development to take place land must be properly distributed,
managed and secure user rights must be present for everyone in a particular
society.
4. PROMOTING EFFECTIVE LAND MANAGEMENT BY WOMEN
Land as a resource covers a wide ecological dimension and is a source of
wealth for every economy and it is a tool for poverty reduction. Land is
generally abundant in supply but desirable land which can be used for
cultivation and other income generating ventures is scarce. The heavy
reliance on land for development makes sound management of this important
resource so as not to compromise the needs of future generations. Suon and
Onkalo (2004) define land management as a system of planning and management
methods and techniques that aim at integrating ecological with social,
economic and legal principles in the management of rural and urban [land]
development purposes to meet changing human needs, while simultaneously
ensuring long-term productive potential of natural resources and the
maintenance of the environment and cultural functions. Land management aims
at sustainable use of land as a resource. Sustainability in this term
implies that land management should promote sustainable development by
preserving the primary environmental resources such as air, soils and water
for present and future users.
Kariuki (2006) asserts that for women to be effective managers of land,
three issues under land need to be addressed. These include land use, land
rights and land administration. Land use involves skills and knowledge. Land
rights will consider the terms and conditions which individuals and
households hold, use and transact land (land tenure). Other issues include
land scarcity and conflicts over land. According to the Bathurst Declaration
on Land Administration for Sustainable Development issued in October 1999,
tenure may be defined as the way in which the rights, restrictions and
responsibilities that people have with respect to the land (and property)
are held. It is a set of rights a person or organization holds in land, is
one of the principal factors in determining the way in which resources are
managed and used, and the manner in which the benefits are distributed.
Security of tenure for women must be viewed as a key link in the chain from
household food production to national food security.
Land administration is the “process of determining, recording and
disseminating information about ownership, value and use of land when
implementing land management policies” (UN/ECE Land Administration
Guidelines). It considers the various institutions that deal with land at
the local or community level, civil societies and various government and
private sector bodies. It aims to manage land in a jurisdiction by providing
security of tenure, a suitable environment for the land market and for
public land management in general (Bathurst Declaration). The problems with
land and women range from tenure disputes, unsuitable land legislation, land
administration, land grabbing and invasions. These have led to unequal
distribution and insecure land tenure. For women these problems are
magnified because of inheritance laws, modern legislation and cultural
issues which in many cases bar a woman from owning land outright or without
the consent of her father or husband. The dichotomy between ‘who tills the
land’ and ‘who holds the user rights’ has thus been a critical issue in
sustaining rural land management, especially with the increase in the
female-headed households owing to the ravages of HIV/AIDS and urban
migration of men in search of employment in urban areas.
5. INHERITANCE AS A MEANS OF DISTRIBUTING LAND
In most areas under under customary tenure distribution or allocation of
land is mainly according to customary or traditional law, purchase or
inheritance. This paper will focus on the distribution of land through
inheritance. The Women and Law in Southern Africa (1994) define inheritance
as an institutional act of apportioning and receiving the property of a
deceased person. It is the practice of passing on property, titles, debt and
obligations upon the death of an individual and varies from one culture,
region, tribe or country. In most of these areas land has assumed the status
of a vital asset, necessitating the need for its protection against
alienation outside the clan or family, on the assumption that girls marry
away from their parental homesteads, they are not entitled to inherit land
exclusively, lest they transfer the land outside the clan or family through
marriage. The principle of protecting clan land applies to male and female
heirs. However, the principle is applied in a discriminatory manner because
while male heirs land rights remain intact during their absence, females
have no such advantage, especially in the case of widows.
Inheritance may be through the bilineal system which is inheritance
through either father or mother. Inheritance and succession determined
through the mother is known as matrilineal while inheritance and succession
which is determined through the male/ father’s lineage is referred to as
patrilineal or gavelkind which is the most common inheritance system in
Africa (Hilhorst, 2000:186). Some cultures also practice a system of
inheritance whereby all property goes to the eldest child (first born) or
son and this is known as primogeniture. According to Lee- Smith and Trujillo
(1999), work done on women's access and rights to land and housing by UNCHS
(Habitat)'s shows that women are disadvantaged in societies where male
inheritance customs are strong. Some societies have a system where
everything is left to the youngest child while other societies every child
is entitled to inherit an equal share. Hilhorst (2000) notes that
matrilineal systems have also transformed. She further argues that in
societies where polygamy is practiced, the share of family land received by
children on their father’s death will often depend on the status of their
mother within the marriage. In addition the number of children a wife has
will also contribute to the share she will inherit and widows with no
children are normally the most vulnerable as they may not even inherit any
property or land.
6. WOMEN’S ROLES IN SOCIETY AND THE IMPORTANCE OF EQUALITY IN THE
DISTRIBUTION OF LAND IN RURAL AREAS
In almost all societies, women play both reproductive and productive
roles. The latter comprise of work done by both women and men for payment in
cash or kind. Despite their important productive roles relating to land,
they also have responsibilities of child bearing, managing their homes,
looking after children, taking care of the sick and elderly, etc.
Furthermore in almost all rural communities agriculture is the main economic
activity providing employment for a large number of the population. Although
women contribute substantially to agriculture and many other activities they
continue to be largely marginalized and undervalued. The role of women in
relation to their environment can be further understood by Redclif (1991)
who was of the view that:
Women’s responsibility for reproduction as well as production places them
in a disadvantageous position in relation to the new market opportunities.
It is women who nature the children, feed the family and provides much of
‘casual’ paid labour, which underpins commodity production for the market.
It’s also women, actually, who interact most closely with the natural
environment: collecting the fuel wood, carrying the household’ s water long
distances, tendering the vegetable garden. Women therefore bear the brunt of
environmental degradation, through their proximity and dependence upon the
environment, while also being held responsible for this decline. Unable to
reverse the erosion of resources to which the household access, women are
placed in the impossible positions of acting as guardians of an environment
which is as undervalued and exploited as their own labour.
Due to relationship with the products of uncultivated land in traditional
management systems, women have lost access to these resources as land is
alienated for other uses in modern economies. Secure land rights foster
sustainable land management and are believed to have a positive impact on
the reduction of poverty, as women will firstly, try and find ways in which
to preserve and regenerate their land thus providing sustainable farming
practices. In other words with secure tenure women can invest in land rather
than destroy the land’s productive potential. Secondly, women can plan
quickly to adjust resource allocation decisions under changing climatic or
economic conditions. Thirdly, women can rely on the productive results of
their labour. Lastly, women will be empowered in decision making since they
can decide what crops to grow, what techniques to use, what to consume and
what to sell. The lack of access to land and an insecure tenure leaves women
with no productive or non productive resources that may be required as means
of survival and this will definitely weaken the socio-economic status of
women. Zambia’s Poverty Reduction Paper (2004) notes that there are benefits
resulting from women’s access to land in terms of family and food security.
Food security in this context is the access by all people, at all times, to
enough food for an active and healthy life, therefore ensuring poverty
reduction.
7. THE IMPACT OF HIV/ AIDS
The HIV/AIDS epidemic is a major challenge facing many countries in
sub-Saharan Africa where according to a UNAIDS Report on the Global AIDS
Epidemic (2004) 75 percent of people of ages 15 to 24 with HIV/AIDS are
female.Within these countries, AIDS is becoming a greater threat in rural
areas than in cities. The Zambian poverty reduction paper (2004) states that
“since the first diagnosed case in Zambia in 1984, HIV/ AIDS has become
increasingly widespread with an estimated adult prevalence of 14 per cent in
rural areas and 28 per cent in urban areas in the 15 – 49 year old age
group.” The report further notes that although the epidemic is showing signs
of stabilization in urban areas, the rates continue to rise in some rural
areas. Studies by Women and Law in Southern Africa confirm that the
situation of women in Zambia poses serious difficulties and challenges
especially when the gender dimension and the socially constructed roles of
men and women are considered. While both men and women are affected by
HIV/AIDS, it is important to recognize that this occurs in different ways
for men and women, because men and women play different roles, have
different needs and face different constraints in responding to the
epidemic. Due to high death rates caused by the HIV/AIDS related illnesses,
many women are being left without land or property which is an essential
resource for their livelihoods especially due to the customary inheritance
practices in most rural areas. In the past widows were regarded
sympathetically and were allowed to remain in their husbands villages even
when they were not inherited but due the change of societal values, economic
hardships and devastating effects of HIV/AIDS family ties have loosened. the
right to occupy and use land was previously passed on to children of the
deceased especially when the widow was kept within the family of her
deceased husband through widow inheritance. Men are reluctant to inherit
widows and widows are reluctant to be inherited as the late husbands family
fear being infected with the disease after inheriting the widow and also
fear the process of taking care of her in the case that she also gets sick.
This leads to widows being dispossessed of land by being forced to leave
their husbands villages because the rightful person to inherit the
deceased’s use and occupation of land is the nephew of the deceased person
(Macmillan, 2002). Women also experience stigmatization and mistreatment and
in some cases there is a stigma that encourages the view that those who are
HIV positive will not be able to properly use the land and therefore they do
not need it. The sale of land by land holders at distress prices in order to
look after those who are sick is also common.
Kariuki (2006) suggests that there is growing evidence to suggest that
where women’s property and inheritance rights are upheld, women acting as
heads and/or primary caregivers of HIV/AIDS-affected households are better
able to mitigate the negative economic and social consequences of AIDS. She
further asserts that the denial of property and inheritance rights
drastically reduces the capacity for households to mitigate the consequences
should a member be infected with HIV. Access to resources such as land by
women will enable women fight the socio economic impacts of HIV/AIDS and
Kangwa (2005) seems to suggest a similar notion when he argues that because
poverty and HIV/ AIDS have the greatest impact on women, all initiatives
must priotise the importance of women’s rights to fair and equal treatment,
as well as their specific needs and challenges.
8. THE ZAMBIAN CASE
Zambia is a subtropical country located in the middle of Southern Africa
and is administratively divided into nine provinces which, in turn, are
divided into seventy-two districts. There are basically two types of tenure
present in this nation, namely customary and state. Customary land is that
held on the basis of tribe, residence or community of interest. Customary
tenure which is mostly in rural areas is legally recognized and accounts for
more than 90 per cent of the land in Zambia. The remaining small portion of
land is state land which consists mainly of land in urban areas and is not
in the jurisdiction of traditional leaders. According to the Land Act of
1995 part 1 Sec 3.1 all land is vested in the president. The traditional
leaders such as chiefs and headmen just act as custodians of the land
although there is no doubt they have a regulatory role over the acquisition
of land.
According to the Republic of Zambia, 2004: Poverty Reduction Strategy
Paper poverty is most prevalent in the rural areas where most livelihoods
are agriculture-based. The paper further asserts that Zambia is abundantly
endowed with resources that are required to stimulate agricultural and rural
development, in general, and poverty reduction in particular. Table 1 shows
the reality of poverty in rural and urban areas in Zambia between 1991-1998.
Table 1: The Evolution of Poverty in Zambia 1990-1996.
Source: CSO: Living Conditions in Zambia 1998
8.1 Access to Land under Customary Tenure or in Rural Areas
Women constitute 65 per cent of the rural labour force working on this
land contributing approximately 60 per cent of the total rural products. It
is, however, sad to know that women’s access to, control over and management
of land that sustains their livelihood is out of their hands. The Zambia
Land Alliance (2005) note that during their consultation process with
various communities in the country, they observed that women did not have
access to land as much as the men despite traditional land being free and
that the tendency to dispossess and remove widows and orphans from family
land upon the death of a husband/father, was widespread. It is evident that
inheritance problems are very evident today not just in the past.
There are seventy-three ethnic groups in Zambia and according to WLSA
(1994) these may be categorized into four social systems which include the
matrilineal ethnic groups which practice matrilocal residence (uxorilocal
marriages), such as the Bemba of Northern province and the Nsenga of Eastern
province; the matrilineal ethnic groups which practice patrilocal residence
(virilocal marriages), such as the Tonga of Southern Province and the Lunda
of North-Western Province; the patrilineal and Patrilocal ehnic groups, such
the Mambwe and Namwanga of Northern Province and the Ngoni of Eastern
Province; bilateral ethnic groups, such as the Lozi of Western Province.
These social systems are more prevalent in rural or under customary tenure
and their customs, cultures and even marriages play an important role in
access to land. The most prominent types of marriages are statutory and
customary marriages. Other types that are recognized are religious
marriages, namely Christian, Moslem and Hindu marriages. A Statutory
marriage is a marriage under the Marriage Act of the Laws of Zambia and may
also be referred to as a Civil or Ordinance Marriage
A customary marriage is a marriage that is conducted according to the
relevant Zambian customary law of the two parties. In the Zambian context,
such a marriage is usually viewed as a union between two families. There are
a number of requirements and procedures to be followed in the traditional
marriage. Firstly a number of transactions take place. These begin with the
approaching of the girl's family with a token symbol or payment called
Nsalamu (Bemba) or vulamulomo (Chewa - literally 'opening the mouth'). The
negotiations go back and forth depending on the traditions and customs of
the parties and culminate in the concluding of the marriage negotiations. A
customary marriage can be registered by the local court and by the rural
councils. A customary marriage is potentially polygamous, that is, during
such a marriage, there is no legal impediment to a man taking another woman
as his wife. Polygamous marriages are very common in Zambia and under
customary tenure it is normally unheard of for a married woman to acquire
land for herself. In cases where a man has more than one wife he apportions
a field to each wife and her children to plant, weed and harvest. The
problem mostly comes in when the husband dies as land and property are
allocated according to status of their mother within the marriage.
Polygamous marriages therefore, contribute a lot to inequality especially in
terms of rights to property and inheritance.
Customary marriages may also be virilocal or uxorilocal. Virilocal
marriages occur when a wife moves to her husbands homestead or village after
marriage, while uxorilocal occur when the husband or man moves to his wife’s
homestead or village after marriage. This also has an influence on
inheritance of land or property in a particular ethnic group incase of the
death of either the husband or wife. The many forms that marriage can take,
the basis (or lack) of marriage contracts, the practice of wife inheritance,
the growing prevalence of cohabitation, norms dictating dowry, and the
ongoing practice of polygamy strongly influence both customary and legal
partnerships and outcomes related to property and inheritance (Steinzor,
2003).
In a newspaper article dated 10th May, 2006 Mushota stated that
traditionally, it was believed that empowering a woman would lead to
marriages breaking and that land is wealth and once women have access to
land they will become self-reliant and won’t have to go through hard
marriage just because of dependency. In the same article Zijena said that,
“traditionally, most chiefs don’t give land to women without the husband’s
consent for fear of the woman becoming empowered and subsequently losing
respect for the husband,” She added that widows in most cases were now being
evicted from the land and that, in villages, women especially widows are
even required to vacate the land and leave it for the husband’s brothers
unless someone from the family marries her but since that custom is no more,
women are left with no land. Widows normally accept loss of property because
they are scared of being bewitched, some do not know their rights especially
towards property, while others find it is difficult to challenge in-laws.
Widows normally return to their natal villages where they start
cultivating land that belongs to their matrilineal male relatives. Women who
do remain in their husbands villages labour in their in-laws’ land where
they work on their mercy and may be chased at any moment. Some of the
customs related to access or ownership of land include widow inheritance
which is a practice where the widow becomes the wife of the successor of the
deceased. According to Machina (2004), thirty per cent of the rural
households are headed by women and are the poorest as they tend to have less
fertile, small plots of land than male-headed households. Most female headed
households are headed by widows and grandmothers characterized by the
ownership of the few productive assets and less access to land for
agricultural production. Short-term responses such as selling productive
assets and removing children from school worsen household poverty in the
long term and contribute to the feminization of poverty in Zambia.
A good example of an ethnic group that follows patrilocal systems of
inheritance is the Ngoni of Eastern Province. On a man’s death inheritance
is essentially on the principle of primogeniture (inheritance is by the
first born). This sort of inheritance has a special meaning to this ethnic
group as they have a social structure that is not only patrilineal but one
in which polygamy is common. According to Mvunga the context of
primogeniture amongst the Ngoni means the following: Firstly, it may mean
inheritance of a man’s estate by his eldest son, where all his children are
born of one and the same wife. Secondly, it may mean inheritance by the
eldest son of the senior house, where children are born of various wives in
a polygamous marriage. Lastly, it may mean inheritance by the eldest male
person who by virtue of belonging to a class of paternal relatives can be
described as the deceased’s nearest blood relative.
Due to the fact that polygamy is considered, inheritance follows what
Mvunga calls ‘principle of inheritance by house.’ House in this context
refers to the order of wives within a particular marriage. Thus seniority of
a house is determined by the sequence in time in which different wives get
married to the same husband. This means that the first wife will create the
senior house while the other wives will be of the junior house. It is the
eldest son of the senior home and not the eldest son of the father (assuming
there is such a one in other houses), who inherits the father’s estate. At
times a son from a junior house may be the heir to a father’s estate and
this only occurs if there is no son in the senior house, then an heir will
be sought in the next senior house which has a son. Though it is worth
noting that in very rear circumstances when the eldest son of a senior house
is failing, the next eldest daughter of the same house inherits the father’s
estates.
8.2 Relevant Legislation Affecting Women’s Access to Land in Zambia
Article 23 of the republican constitution allows for customary law and
practices to exist side by side with statutory law. Zambia’s dual legal
system means that people are governed by different and often contradictory
systems of law. General Law depends on English law, with many statutes new
and old being replicas of English rules of registration. Women’s access to,
control over and ownership of land are above all constrained by customary
law and by attitudes and practices, which reflect the subordinate position
under customary law, (Keller, 2000). Customary law is not codified but
comprises of unwritten social rules that are mainly passed on from one
generation to another. Customary law is based on the particular ideologies
operating on the premise that men are biologically superior to women and
varies from one ethnic group to another. This logic has also permeated all
instructions of socialization both tradition and constitution. Although a
lot of policies and laws have been put in place over the years concerning
equality in relation to land issues they receive a blind eye especially in
rural areas where the land is mostly under customary tenure. Ossko (2006)
asserts that in many countries besides written law, customary, informal laws
are parallel existing which are very important for a lot of people. He
further remarks that sustainable land administration has to take unwritten
laws into consideration if it wants to serve the entire society. This is
very true especially in most African countries.
The 2000 Land Policy states that ’while current laws do not discriminate
against women; women still lack security of tenure to land in comparison
with their male counterparts.’ The policy puts the blame on customary and
traditional practices. With this in mind the policy states that ‘thirty per
cent of the land, which is to be demarcated and allocated, is to be set
aside for women and other vulnerable groups.’ When a person dies without
leaving a will the 1989 Interstate Succession Act gives a provision for the
spouse to inherit twenty percent of the deceased estate. The problem is that
this law and many other laws that favour womens ownership of land are not
applicable in most areas that are under customary tenure especially the
remotest parts of the country where people have never even heard of such
laws.
Alot of international policies may apply in Zambia and just three of the
many will be discussed. The Convention on the Elimination of all forms of
Discrimination against Women (1979) which Zambia signed in 1980 and ratified
in 1985, discussed issues that directly affect the welfare of rural women
such as: adopting appropriate legislative and other measures, including
sanctions where appropriate, prohibiting all discrimination against women;
modifying or abolishing existing laws, regulations, customs and practices
which constitute discrimination against women, taking all appropriate
measures to eliminate discrimination against women in rural areas in order
to ensure, on a basis of equality of men and women that they participate in
and benefit from rural development. The United Nations Commission on Human
Rights Resolution 2002/49 affirms that “discrimination in law against women
with respect to having access to, acquiring, and securing land, property,
and housing, as well as financing of land, property, and housing,
constitutes a violation of women’s human right to protection against
discrimination.” The resolution also encourages “Governments to support the
transformation of customs and traditions that discriminate against women and
deny women security of tenure and equal ownership of, access to, and control
over land and equal rights to own property and to adequate housing.”
The "inheritance clause", which was birthed by the Super Coalition in
Beijing was aggresively debated and became a major item in the Platform For
Action. The Beijing conference also noted that environmental degradation
that affects all human lives often has a more direct impact on women, as
their health and their livelihood are threatened by pollution and toxic
wastes, large-scale deforestation, desertification, drought and depletion of
the soil and of coastal and marine resources, with a rising incidence of
environmentally related health problems and even death reported among women
and girls. The Platfoam also alluded to the fact that the most affected are
rural and indigenous women, whose livelihood and daily subsistence depends
directly on sustainable ecosystems. The documents mentioned and many others
that individual countries such as Zambia are affiliated to must be properly
analyzed to find ways in which they can be implemented so as to bring about
equality in the access to land between men and women under customary tenure
or in rural areas.
9. CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION
The gap between who gets the land and who tills the land under customary
tenure is still very wide as men and not women make most decisions
concerning customary inheritance or allocation of land and it is very
difficult for women to own their own land. In view of the foregoing, the
following recommendations may be seen as a tool under customary tenure to
enhance women’s secure tenure and access to of land.
Land management in most areas under customary tenure or rural areas in
Africa is handicapped by customary practices such as inheritance that are
embedded in tradition, customs, family heads and lineage/clan leaders who
determine who gets the land. The improvement of the management of land under
customary tenure will surely have a direct effects on the access to,
distribution of land and promote secure user rights which will definitely be
an important step in ensuring food security and poverty reduction in nations
where women’s lack of access to land and security of tenure is prevalent. If
land management or land administration systems are improved and women have
better access to land through practical efforts, then surveyors will really
be seen to contribute positively to the change go in the world today.
Figure 1 Model for the improvement of land management under
customary tenure
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BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
Ms. Nsemiwe Nsama is currently pursuing a Bachelor of Science
Degree in Real Estate at the Copperbelt University in Zambia. She worked as
an intern at Knight Frank Zambia (Feb – April 2006) and at the Ministry of
Lands (Jan –March 2005). She also worked for Standard Chartered Bank (June
2001 – March 2003) and at Fountain of Hope: An NGO dealing with the welfare
of street children, orphans and other vulnerable children (1999-2001). She
is a member of the Commonwealth Association of Surveying and Land Economy
and also of the African Real Estate Society. She is currently serving as the
vice president of The Copperbelt University Real Estate Students
Association.
CONTACTS
Nsemiwe Nsama
4th Year Real Estate Student
Department of Real Estate Studies School of the Built Environment
The Copperbelt University
PO Box 21692
Kitwe
ZAMBIA
Mobile: + 26096922822
e-mail: nsamansemiwe@lycos.com
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