- Title
- Gender equity in land tenure : an assessment of the challenges faced by women in the communal land tenure system in Keiskammahoek, South Africa
- Creator
- Sonkosi, Abongile
- Subject
- Land tenure--South Africa--Eastern Cape Land use--South Africa--Eastern Cape Land tenure
- Date
- 2018
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- Rural Development
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10353/17138
- Identifier
- vital:40859
- Description
- Despite the importance of land to women, women however are still deprived of security of tenure as a result of the gender biased laws which at their best only protect married women and at their worst fail to protect the rights of single, widowed and divorced women. An analysis of the land reform policies in South Africa as a whole on the issue of the advancement of women through land reform reveals a number of irregularities and false promises. Many of the new policy shifts are problematic as they tend to benefit the elite and continue to leave the majority of the rural poor people particularly women in communal areas with insecure land tenure. This research study examined: 1. the nature of land relations at work in Keiskammahoek and how they impact women’s rights to land. 2. How women in Keiskammahoek view their rights to land. 3. The challenges experienced and progress made by women in claiming their land rights in Keiskamahoek. Despite the importance of land to women, women however are still deprived of security of tenure as a result of the gender biased laws which at their best only protect married women and at their worst fail to protect the rights of single, widowed and divorced women. An analysis of the land reform policies in South Africa as a whole on the issue of the advancement of women through land reform reveals a number of irregularities and false promises. Many of the new policy shifts are problematic as they tend to benefit the elite and continue to leave the majority of the rural poor people particularly women in communal areas with insecure land tenure. This research study examined: 1. the nature of land relations at work in Keiskammahoek and how they impact women’s rights to land. 2. How women in Keiskammahoek view their rights to land. 3. The challenges experienced and progress made by women in claiming their land rights in Keiskamahoek. ownership in their communities. They expressed strong views against the suppression of their voice due to patriarchal structures that govern the way they live. They further observed that a woman’s voice in the rural communities generally does not get heard and that even if women get into positions of power they fail to stand up against women’s marginalization and gender inequalities. However, the most positive finding is that the wind of change is blowing in Keiskammahoek as different categories of women - married, single, divorced, widowed etc. begin to access residential and to some limited degree, agricultural plots. They appeal to the government to support them in accessing agricultural tools including tractors, irrigation systems, seeds etc. Although the progress made so far with regard to women’s access to land is acknowledged, a great deal of work still needs to be done in order to empower women through land reform. The study makes recommendations on the implementation of land tenure policy that addresses women’s challenges in land access and ownership.
- Format
- 121 leaves
- Format
- Publisher
- University of Fort Hare
- Publisher
- Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities
- Language
- English
- Rights
- University of Fort Hare
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