Featured image for “Want feminist development that builds climate resilience? Then we have to talk about land and water rights”

Want feminist development that builds climate resilience? Then we have to talk about land and water rights

September 10, 2025
Millions of women across the globe farm and look after land – yet are excluded from owning it, hurting their incomes, depriving them of wealth and undermining their other basic rights. Anandita Ghosh and Shivani Satija on a wide-ranging issue of the Oxfam-edited Gender and Development journal that not only examines structural obstacles to women owning land but also looks at broader themes, including the way deprivation of land rights adds to women’s care workload – and, crucially, how securing women’s land and water rights will be essential for global food security and climate resilience.
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Featured image for “Land is at the heart of women’s rights in the Global South: so why no mention of it in this year’s UN political declaration?”

Land is at the heart of women’s rights in the Global South: so why no mention of it in this year’s UN political declaration?

April 10, 2025
While the landmark Beijing declaration 30 years ago on women’s rights mentioned land rights 30 times, this year’s UN Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) declaration fails to mention them at all. Naomi Shadrack explains why we need to put land firmly back on the global feminist agenda.
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Has Zimbabwe’s land reform actually been a success? A new book says yes.

January 28, 2013
I’ve never been to Zimbabwe, so tend to get my messages from the news coverage. On land issues, that means a picture of a predatory state driving white farmers off the land and handing it out to cronies and bogus war veterans, who fail to produce anything much in the way of crops. Zimbabwe Takes Back its Land, a new
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Soccer, mobile workshops and struggle: how change happens in Bolivia

November 25, 2011
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