Do Secure Land Tenure and Property Rights Necessarily Reduce Gender-Based Violence?

In association with Human Rights Day and the annual 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence (GBV) Campaign, this commentary draws from three studies that show that the relationship between secure land tenure and property rights (LTPR) and reduced GBV is not always simple and direct, but rather, is contingent on the local social and political context. It is important to clearly understand this relationship to design more realistic and ultimately successful programming that recognizes how women’s lives are embedded in larger social structures and how women simultaneously occupy and negotiate multiple identities (i.e., mother, daughter, sister, wife, daughter-in-law).

Property ownership is one among a combination of assets that give women bargaining power within the household to address domestic violence, according to a study by Friedemann-Sanchez (2006). The study examined the effects of property ownership on women’s intra-household bargaining power in Colombia’s cut flower industry. Women had more relative power to address domestic violence when they had a combination of the following: 1) social capital (for example, the ability to move in with family), or 2) access to childcare that allowed them to work, which 3) gave them wage income to either purchase property or move out of their home and live on their own. Importantly, women who did not have a combination of these assets were not able to address domestic violence as effectively or at all. Friedemann-Sanchez’s work illustrates that property ownership is a necessary but not alone sufficient condition to increase a woman’s bargaining power and reduce the threat of violence within her household.

A 2011 report by Chowdhry illustrates how local political and economic factors and women’s inheritance rights may reduce violence against women and can change local marriage customs that often create opportunities for GBV. Marriage customs in India traditionally require a woman to marry outside of her home community and move to her husband’s family home. There is extensive research to show that a new daughter-in-law is subordinated in her new home by her mother-in-law, sister-in-law and husband. Chowdhry’s study of women’s land ownership in the state of Haryana illustrates how land scarcity and women’s land inheritance can change marriage traditions. In a number of cases, a husband chose to move in with his wife and farm her land after marriage. When a man moves in with his wife’s family, he must come to grips with becoming a ‘son-in-law’ in a way that most men in Haryana’s patriarchal society rarely do. In her own natal home, a wife is no longer a target of abuse by in-laws, and couples may have quite different relationship dynamics. In this particular political and economic context, Chowdhry’s work illustrates how women’s inheritance can change martial relationships. However, while many women who Chowdhry interviewed claimed that they suffer less physical violence when they live in their natal homes with their husbands, they still endure a husband’s verbal abuse. Outside of the marital relationship, a woman who has inherited a piece of land might find herself subject to threats and abuse from a number of male relatives as they seek to exert control over the land she owns.

Finally, Joshi (2013) explores the relationship between tenure security, urban service delivery, and GBV. In many slums around the world, individuals defecate in public toilets or in open spaces and are subject to verbal and physical abuse in the process. Joshi examined household (private) sanitation projects in urban slums in Kenya and Bangladesh. She argues that even if improved tenure security increases the likelihood of public or household investment in sanitation, private access to sanitation does not reduce GBV or the underlying gender inequality upon which it is based. Moving sanitation into the home does not reduce women’s exposure to verbal abuse and physical assault, because those abuses are not limited to her walks to the toilet. In fact, private sanitation provision may allow men to control their wives’ movement and interactions, keeping her in the private sphere (the home), but making her no safer. Thus while it may appear that tenure security and urban service delivery reduce violence, GBV may persist out of sight in the home and in society at large. Reducing women’s exposure to violence is not equivalent to reducing GBV itself. Reducing GBV also requires changes in men’s attitudes and behavior toward women.

I hope that this commentary spurs a conversation among policy makers and development practitioners who integrate LTPR into their work to consider 1) how LTPR can act as an analytical lens to study gender relations; and 2) the extent to which LTPR programming can facilitate structural change and address the patriarchal norms that govern many women’s lives around the world.

New Developments in REDD+ and Resource Tenure

By Dr. Matt Sommerville, Chief of Party, Tenure and Global Climate Change Project.

At the recently concluded 2013 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Conference in Warsaw, Poland, negotiators agreed to a landmark set of decisions. After seven years of negotiations, United Nations (UN) member states reached a consensus on a framework to reward countries for REDD+ actions (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation).

[Read more on the background of REDD+ negotiations and the links to land tenure and natural resource rights.]

The agreement reached in Warsaw defines a broad structure for establishing emission reference levels to measure future emission reductions against. It reaffirms the role of social and environmental safeguards in the process and notes that financing can be provided for “readiness” activities that prepare countries to participate in REDD+, as well as for emission reductions. There is still work to be done to address key issues related to securing natural resource rights and improving tenure governance, particularly regarding how benefits will flow to local stakeholders and operationalization of safeguards. Emerging lessons from USAID forest carbon projects, as well as technical support provided by USAID to the international community, are helping to build social and environmental soundness into both the policy and practice of REDD+.

At the Warsaw meeting, countries agreed to establish a national entity or “focal point” within REDD+ countries to act as a liaison to coordinate information sharing and financial support for the implementation of REDD+ activities. In some countries, this institutional arrangement is likely to facilitate the coordination of diverse activities and allow funds to flow directly to implementing agencies and project proponents. However, this structure also presents risks associated with the potential centralization of REDD+ financing at the national level.

It is important to ensure that the new REDD+ “focal points” effectively consider the role of local stakeholders. A crucial first meeting between financing institutions and the new focal points will occur in November 2014 in Lima, Peru, followed by additional meetings in June 2014. While the new REDD+ mechanism invites continued input and representation from multiple groups – including UN institutions, international and regional organizations, the private sector, and indigenous peoples – these first meetings will establish how the voices of various stakeholders are recognized.

UNFCCC negotiators also reconfirmed the importance of safeguards in the emerging REDD+ mechanism. Performance payments will be based on achieving these safeguards, several of which reinforce strong natural resource rights and tenure governance, such as:

  • Transparent and effective national forest governance structures;
  • Respect for the knowledge and rights of indigenous peoples and members of local communities; and
  • Full and effective participation of all relevant stakeholders, especially indigenous peoples and local communities.

While REDD+ countries will be required to report on how these and other safeguards are implemented, this reporting will only happen after REDD+ activities have begun and only on an infrequent basis (in coordination with the often slow timeframe of UNFCCC national communications). This may limit the ability of financers to properly understand baseline social and environmental conditions. As usual in these negotiations, the details have yet to be clarified and will be subject to individual countries’ interpretations.

At present, as safeguard information systems and operational guidance are developed, there is a need to continue monitoring the developing structures. Looking ahead, there is also a need to document how strengthening natural resource rights and tenure governance leads to sustainable, equitable, efficient and effective REDD+ programs. USAID is playing an important role with other donors and civil society to evaluate and document these emerging experiences.

Ethiopia Partners with the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany to Improve Rural Land Governance

USAID is pleased to announce a first-of-its-kind partnership between the Governments of Ethiopia, the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Federal Republic of Germany to improve rural land governance. Building on existing programs and the seven land country partnerships announced at this year’s G8 Open for Growth Summit, this new partnership will support greater transparency in rural land governance, promote responsible agricultural investment, and improve Ethiopia’s legal framework and practices related to rural land administration and land use.

The partnership will foster further collaboration between Ethiopia and its development partners to strengthen rural land governance and realize the Voluntary Guidelines for the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries, and Forests in the Context of National Food Security. This partnership will also support the Government of Ethiopia to implement its Rural Land Administration and Use Plan and to achieve its existing commitments under the New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition, a partnership among G8 members, African nations, and the private sector to lift 50 million people out of poverty through coordinated policy reforms and responsible agricultural investment. In addition, it will help Ethiopia’s development partners to amplify the impact of their development support by coordinating efforts, sharing knowledge, and leveraging limited resources.

One of the programs involved in this new partnership is USAID’s recently launched Land Administration to Nurture Development (LAND) project. The LAND project works to strengthen the capacity of federal and regional land administration agencies, to improve the legal frameworks for rural land administration and land use, and to expand the documentation of rural land use rights, including in pastoral areas.

“The United States applauds the Government of Ethiopia for its commitment to strengthen rural land governance and welcomes this opportunity to collaborate more closely with our partners. This partnership provides a model for greater coordination that will improve the effectiveness of our investments in securing land tenure and property rights. We hope to see more of these partnerships developed in the future,” said Dr. Gregory Myers, USAID Division Chief, Land Tenure and Property Rights.

New Interactive Map of USAID and MCC Land Governance Programs

Over the past year, USAID has led a global effort in the land and resource governance sector to improve donor coordination and support the Voluntary Guidelines for the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries, and Forests in the Context of National Food Security(Voluntary Guidelines). Working with the Global Donor Working Group on Land, a newly formed group of bi-lateral and multi-lateral donors and development agencies, USAID led a data collection and visualization project that gathered information on land and resource governance programs from around the globe. The result of this effort – a database of over 400 programs in more than 100 countries – will be launched publicly at the Global Donor Platform Annual General Assembly in January 2014.

USAID is making information on each of its projects publicly available now. Visit the new interactive map that displays where USAID is working and what USAID is working on with respect to land tenure and property rights. This includes USAID projects that focus exclusively on strengthening land tenure and property rights, as well as projects with a broader focus on other issues in which land tenure and property rights activities are included. This map also includes information on land and resource governance programs funded by the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), with whom USAID often works in a whole-of-government approach to strengthening land tenure and property rights.

In addition, the map incorporates information on how each USAID and MCC project supports the Voluntary Guidelines. According to Dr. Gregory Myers, USAID Division Chief, Land Tenure and Property Rights, “successful realization of the Voluntary Guidelines will require coordinated action by development agencies, civil society organizations and governments around the world. When the Global Donor Land Governance Program Database is publicly launched in January, it will provide stakeholders with a platform for information sharing and coordination in support of the Voluntary Guidelines, with profound consequences for millions of people. We are releasing our own program information now as a demonstration of the U.S. Government’s commitments to greater transparency and the Voluntary Guidelines.”

All too often our development efforts are hampered by a lack of coordination and knowledge sharing among relevant partners striving toward common goals. Better communication and coordination among donors and development agencies can help us avoid unnecessary duplication, share lessons learned, and amplify the impact of our work.

Launch the interactive map of USAID and MCC land tenure and property rights programs.

USAID Applauds Coca-Cola’s Commitments to Protect Land Rights

USAID welcomes The Coca-Cola Company’s recently announced commitments to ensure that its sugar suppliers protect the land rights of local communities. Coca-Cola – the world’s largest purchaser of sugar – agreed to revise its corporate Supplier Guiding Principles to incorporate principles that recognize and safeguard local communities’ and indigenous peoples’ rights to land and natural resources. Coca-Cola also agreed to publicly advocate that food and beverage companies, traders, and governments endorse and implement the Voluntary Guidelines for the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries, and Forests in the Context of National Food Security.

As we have argued previously, responsible private investment is necessary to enhance food security, promote economic growth and lift millions of people out of poverty. Coca-Cola’s commitments – including the commitment to cut off any suppliers that do not adhere to its revised Supplier Guiding Principles – provide an innovative model for private sector actors to ensure that their investments are responsible and their suppliers recognize the property rights of local individuals and communities. Additionally, Coca-Cola’s commitment to support implementation of the Voluntary Guidelines and increase its participation in the UN Committee on World Food Security (CFS) advances what the private sector is doing to engage on land governance issues that could help amplify the impact of the Voluntary Guidelines.

“We welcome Coca-Cola’s commitments to recognize the property rights of local communities and promote transparency along its supply chain. Coca-Cola and other responsible private sector actors have the ability to affect positive change by leveraging their market power to compel their suppliers to work in consultation with local communities and adhere to guidelines that protect rights and promote responsible investment. We support Coca-Cola’s commitments and hope other companies follow suit. We also acknowledge the work of Oxfam in developing this important agreement,” said Dr. Gregory Myers, USAID Division Chief, Land Tenure and Property Rights. Dr. Myers added, “We also encourage greater private sector participation in CFS. We would welcome additional roundtable discussions between the private sector, civil society and governments on responsible agricultural investment.”

Coca-Cola’s announcement followed the release of Sugar rush: Land rights and the supply chains of the biggest food and beverage companies, a report by Oxfam International that claims that land acquired for sugar production has often displaced local communities and led to land-related conflicts. Coca-Cola’s recent announcement included commitments to conduct third-party social, environmental and human rights assessments, which will include impacts related to land and land conflicts, in its top 16 cane sugar sourcing countries, beginning in Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, India, Philippines, Thailand and South Africa.

According to Ed Potter, Coca-Cola’s director of global workplace rights, “our company does not typically purchase ingredients directly from farms, nor are we owners of sugar farms or plantations, but as a major buyer of several agricultural ingredients, we acknowledge our responsibility to take action and use our influence to help protect the land rights of local communities.”

See the full list of Coca-Cola’s commitments here.

FAO Progress Supporting Implementation of the Voluntary Guidelines

A guest post by Dr. Paul Munro-Faure, Deputy Director, Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

Following the endorsement of the Voluntary Guidelines for the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries, and Forests in the Context of National Food Security (commonly referred to as the Voluntary Guidelines) in 2012, FAO initiated a four-year programme for making improved governance of tenure a reality. One of the main aspects of the program is awareness raising. To that end, we have made the Voluntary Guidelines available in six official languages on FAO’s website and distributed over 15,000 printed copies to people in about 140 countries. FAO has also helped to convene ten regional awareness raising workshops over the past twelve months. We have recently begun convening sub-regional meetings, starting with a meeting in Abu Dhabi for the Gulf States and Yemen. Country level workshops will begin in the next couple of months and resources are already available to start these in more than twelve countries.

Another aspect of this programme is capacity development – preparing additional tools and aids to support implementation of the Guidelines. We are close to finalizing the initial five Governance of Tenure Technical Guides prepared by FAO and partners, which address core areas in the Voluntary Guidelines. An additional eight guides and their dissemination are under discussion with donors and stakeholders.

We have also made progress in developing e-learning programmes to disseminate and build capacity for supporting implementation of the Voluntary Guidelines. Open-source land administration software is also being made available and supported with increased functionality to requesting countries.

At the country level, we are responding systematically to requests for support in implementing the Guidelines, with discussions already underway for six countries. We are also in discussion with key stakeholders regarding partnerships targeting support for implementation of the Guidelines. We are engaged in detailed discussions on a partnership with the African Union’s Land Policy Initiative, the World Bank on mainstreaming of the Voluntary Guidelines in the Bank’s land-related portfolio, and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) on strengthening partnerships at the country level.

The regional workshops this past year have both re-validated and reinforced the recognition of the vital importance of the Voluntary Guidelines, showing that political momentum is developing and that governments are becoming more ready to engage. They have emphasized the importance of capacity development at the country level and the critical role for FAO in country level awareness raising and dialogue. A great deal has been achieved at the global and regional levels through enormous media coverage. We are, however, in the first stages of a long process. Awareness, capacities, momentum and support are all critically needed at levels where work is to be done – on the ground – principally at the national levels and with all stakeholder groups.

The regional workshops have prompted increasing numbers of requests for national and sub-regional workshops and that is where FAO and its partners will really make the difference. At the national levels, we can provide information on the messages of the Voluntary Guidelines and help provide space for discussion about how they can change peoples’ lives for the better.

Three quotations from those participating in the regional awareness raising workshops reflect the tenor of this groundswell of support and interest:

  • “The Guidelines showcase a people-centred approach to tenure, putting a human face on the issue”
  • “The Guidelines are ideas we can work towards”
  • “The value of the guidelines is not only in their content but also in what they can induce”

Read more information on the Voluntary Guidelines from FAO and from USAID.

USAID’s Dr. Gregory Myers on the Future of Land Rights

By Dr. Gregory Myers, USAID Division Chief, Land Tenure and Property Rights

USAID recently sponsored Devex’s Land Matters campaign in order to raise awareness about the importance of property rights. Throughout this campaign I stress that secure land tenure and property rights (LTPR) is the gateway to economic growth, food security, sustainable natural resources management, and other development goals.

I participated in the final event of the month-long campaign, a filmed discussion on the future of land rights, facilitated by Karol Boudreaux, Director of Investments, Omidyar Network. We were joined by Dr. Steven Lawry, Global Lead, Land Tenure & Property Rights, DAI and Tiernan Mennen, Director, South America, Chemonics. Between us, we have spent decades working on strengthening land rights. However, as we all agreed, this is the first time there has been a consensus among United Nations organizations, the World Bank, technical experts, civil society organizations, and many bilateral donors that secure LTPR is fundamental to development goals.

Currently, the U.S. Government invests more in LTPR programs than any other bilateral donor—with 44 projects in 36 countries. However, this work represents only a small fraction of the U.S. foreign aid budget, which is less than 1% of the overall U.S. budget. Consequently, we make strategic investments where small amounts of money can lead to measurable impacts and programs that can be replicated by host governments and donor partners. The investments we make in strengthening ownership rights create choices, which can lead to economic empowerment for families and communities.

One good example of our work is in Ethiopia where USAID helped 600,000 families plot their land and secure documents that prove their rights to it. Through this project, some women who leased out land found out that the area of their plot was actually twice as large as they earlier thought. They raised land rents and our analysis showed that overall, household incomes increased dramatically—by 10 to potentially 40% in the area. This led to changes in household decision making, including increased investment in children’s education.

Focusing on women’s property rights has proven to be an effective way to change lives through relatively small amounts of money. A change as simple and easy as including a line for a woman’s name on a title or deed to a house creates rights for her that lead to entirely different household economic choices. When women have access to land and secure rights, they increase their income and make investments in food and their children’s futures. Focusing on women increases USAID’s impact in a country for no additional cost.

When we multiply these efforts across Ethiopia, Africa, and the entire spectrum of countries worldwide that have weak property rights systems, we will see a tremendous impact on incomes, economic growth, and food security. Of course, the trick is finding an appropriate model for each country.

An appropriate model is both realistic and fair. USAID recognizes that private sector investments in agriculture can scale up food production, but can also create a power imbalance. Therefore, we work with governments to ensure that they recognize the land and resource rights of communities as part of or before large scale investments are made. We also help communities build their capacity to negotiate and benefit from outside investments. Then when these two sides come together, both can profit.

We have reached an historic moment where international donors are coordinating to strengthen land rights for people in developing countries. Last month, the Global Donor Working Group on Land – an organization of donors and development agencies working to strengthen land governance – held its first official meeting in Rome. I am happy to note that USAID is a founding member of this new body. One of the first tasks of the Working Group was to create a database of all donor-funded land governance programs. This donor database – which USAID played a lead role in developing – will be launched publicly in January, 2014.

It is exciting to see a consensus emerging among the global donor community that secure land tenure and property rights are the gateway to achieving international development goals, and that by working together we can insure better use of public resources and the application of data-driven best practices. In ten to twenty years I expect we’ll see new forms of governance systems around property rights emerge that are much more democratic, and equitable (particularly for women) and promote better economic returns. Vesting rights in people empowers them to make decisions about their assets, and thus their future.

If you are interested in the future of land rights, I encourage you to watch the video of the discussion. I will continue this dialogue–answering your questions–through Twitter on Thursday, November 14, 2:00 – 3:00 PM (EST) during an Ask-the-expert session hosted by @USAID. You may submit questions now by tweeting #AskUSAID.

Highlights from the Committee on World Food Security

A guest post by Dr. Paul Munro-Faure, Deputy Director, Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

Last month, the 40th Session of the UN Committee on World Food Security (CFS) was held at the headquarters of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Rome. Land governance and responsible tenure were a strong thread of interest and discussion throughout the week-long meeting.

CFS Week provided important opportunities to review the achievements of various stakeholders in implementing the Voluntary Guidelines for the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries, and Forests in the Context of National Food Security (commonly referred to as the Voluntary Guidelines), which were endorsed by the CFS in May 2012. During the plenary session on October 9, the FAO Secretariat, members of civil society and the private sector, and representatives from the government of Brazil presented updates on their progress in supporting implementation of various aspects of the Voluntary Guidelines.

On October 7, FAO hosted a side event on progress in supporting implementation of the Voluntary Guidelines. There, FAO presented details on its programme of support for the implementation of the Voluntary Guidelines. Carlos Mário Guedes De Guedes, President of the National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform (INCRA) discussed Brazil’s enthusiastic take-up of the Voluntary Guidelines and their mainstreaming in the context of the International Year of Family Farming. Ángel Strapazzón, Movimiento Nacional Campesino Indígena, speaking on behalf of the International Planning Committee for Food Sovereignty (IPC) working group on land, provided an update on the activities undertaken by Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) in support of the Voluntary Guidelines. Strapazzón noted how, with the support of FAO and the European Union, CSOs are developing capacity building material on the Guidelines, specifically dedicated to CSOs, social movements, and farmers’ organizations. Jorge Muñoz, Land Tenure Advisor at the World Bank, reported on the World Bank’s assessment of the Voluntary Guidelines’ importance and how the World Bank is mainstreaming the Voluntary Guidelines in its work.

On October 9, the UK’s Department for International Development (DfID) hosted a side event on land tenure and property rights in a post-2015 agenda. The presentations and discussions centered on indicators for secure land tenure in the post-2015 Millennium Development Goal (MDG) framework. Representatives from DfID, USAID, Landesa and the Global Land Tools Network (GLTN) and around 70 participants discussed the need for a robust and measurable target for land tenure security and property rights and how best to galvanize support towards incorporating a land tenure and property rights goal into the post-2015 MDG agenda.

The final day of CFS Week, October 11, saw an important, but separate meeting: the first formal meeting of the Global Donor Working Group on Land, which is currently chaired by DfID. Formed in the wake of the Voluntary Guidelines negotiations, the Working Group is tasked with improving coordination of donor-funded tenure-related initiatives and activities. The group is working to create an inventory of all donor-funded land governance programs and to enhance donor communication and coordination. As the Working Group gets underway, these efforts will make a real difference in improving the efficiency and effectiveness of land governance programs and maximizing the impact of available resources.

Land Rights are Fundamental to Millennium Development Goals

Why are secure property rights and good land governance fundamental to achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)? Earlier this month, a group of experts provided answers to this question – and worked to build support for a prominent role for land tenure security and property rights in a Post-2015 MDG framework – at a side event at the UN Committee on World Food Security (CFS).

According to Dr. Gregory Myers, USAID Division Chief, Land Tenure and Property Rights, “the United States views land tenure and property rights as a critical element of the Post-2015 Development Agenda. Secure property rights play a central role in supporting balanced and sustainable economic growth, encouraging investment, improving agricultural productivity, limiting conflict and instability, accelerating women’s economic empowerment, enhancing democratic governance and human rights, and improving natural resource management and biodiversity conservation.”

The international community has shown an increasing recognition of the centrality of land tenure and property rights to critical development issues. Earlier this year, the High-Level Panel of Eminent Persons on the Post-2015 Development Agenda proposed a target on “secure rights to land, property, and other assets” as a building block for people to lift themselves out of poverty. They also placed a particular emphasis on land and property rights for women.

Landesa, a USAID partner in addressing land tenure and property rights issues, recently launched a new website devoted to advocating for the inclusion of secure land and resource rights in the Post-2015 MDG framework. Landesa, one of the leading advocates for this issue, also published an op-ed last month on Why Land Rights Should be Part of the Post-2015 Agenda.

According to the op-ed, “in the past, secure land rights were often overlooked by the development community, in large part because they are an invisible infrastructure. They are a critical foundation for building peaceful and prosperous societies, but hard to see and a challenge to measure. When these rights are secure however, other development interventions can take root. Moreover, they are a gateway right: communities, families, men and women who enjoy them can use them to realize other broader and often more tangible rights and goals.”

The Post-2015 MDG framework will guide global and national development priorities and help to galvanize development efforts for years to come. As a fundamental building block to much that the MDGs seek to achieve, secure land tenure and property rights should be central to the development agenda.

New Assessment Tools & Intervention Matrices for Land Rights

USAID’s Land Tenure and Property Rights (LTPR) Division has released a new suite of tools and methodologies created under the recently completed Property Rights and Resource Governance (PRRG) Project. These tools were designed to enhance the understanding of LTPR challenges and improve programming to advance the global development objectives of the United States, including food security, global climate change, conflict mitigation and women’s economic empowerment.

The tools are intended to help USAID technical staff as well as other U.S. Government personnel and development practitioners understand:

1) USAID’s programming approach to land tenure and property rights issues,
2) Recommended interventions for different asset and social classes,
3) Considerations for sequencing interventions in order to maximize impact, and
4) Assessment and evaluation of LTPR issues and projects.

LTPR and other development professionals outside the U.S. Government are also likely to find the tools useful in their own context for the reasons listed above.

How to use the tools

The suite of tools guide users through the assessment of issues and constraints regarding LTPR and resource domains, specifically minerals, trees and forests, freshwater lakes, rivers, and groundwater. Users should begin with the Land Tenure and Property Rights (LTPR) Framework, which introduces themes, definitions, and the LTPR matrix. The matrix helps users identify the “universe” of possible LTPR constraints and interventions and the causal linkages between them. There are five matrix overlays that guide users through additional constraint and intervention considerations. These matrix overlays can be used alone or in coordination with one another to understand how LTPR issues impact projects.

In addition to the matrices, there are two tools that offer methodologies to guide USAID mission programming. The LTPR Situation Assessment and Intervention Planning (SAIP) Tool helps USAID missions assess LTPR issues and determine how these contribute to or impede realization of development objectives. The LTPR Impact Evaluation Tool provides a methodology for designing evaluations around the outcomes and impacts of land and natural resource tenure and property rights programming.

USAID and other USG staff that have a need for LTPR technical assistance, may contact the Land Tenure Division. Development professionals seeking a more general understanding of basic LTPR issues should refer to USAID’s LTPR Issue Briefs.