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Land restitution and women in Colombia Henrik Wiig Department of International studies Norwegian Institute of Urban and Regional Research World Bank Land and Poverty conference, session 05-04: “Land issues in Colombia: From dispossession to restitution” Tuesday, 24/Mar/2015: 4:30pm - 6:00pm, MC 4-800
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Land conflicts throughout history Long history of conflicts – 1800 incidences – War of the 1000 days, 1901-03 – ”The violence” 1948-58 – Current violence, 1960- Weak central state, semi-feudal countryside – Limited implementation of laws in rural areas – Previous land reform gave way to current conflict – Paramilitary influence in congress
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Land reform and restitution: separate ways Land restitution in Victims’ Law of 2011 – Pres. Santos initiative, no FARC involvement – Land lost since 1991 to original owner(s) – Dual purpose: (i) to assist poor victims and (ii) reinstall respect for private property War ↔ Window of opportunity, break vicious circle “Integrated rural reform” as part of ongoing peace negotiations with FARC – Redistribution 10 million ha of (state) land
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VL focus on women Differential and preferential treatment – Priority access for women at all stages of the process – Specific measures to reach women Women’s groups Outcome – Neighbors identify women’s plots – Women fear presenting claims – Women do not intend to return Single mothers, fear and bad memories, not farmers – Small areas covered, all applicants treated equally
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Microfocalized zone – Municipality El Carmen de Bolivar
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Joint ownership as redistribution of capital from men to women Father (and mother) Son Daugther Wife Inherit law states sons and daugthers have equal rights Victimes Law’ impose joint ownership man and woman – Last minute entry in VL without public discussion or knowledge – Still no spesific regulations to single out Civil code, inherit/brought remains individual Confiscate private property to compensate structural discrimination – Rights to unregistered land not possible to transfer – Accept informal rights for households, but not individuals
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Slow process 431 sentences (June 2014) 834 parcels (possibly several plots in each) 3500 individuals (51% women) 20.877 HA land restituted (70% in any use) 52.000 applications << 5 million displaced – Restitution process stops after 10 years Source: URT, by Land Observatory URT: A 31 de diciembre de 2014, de las 9.695 solicitudes inscritas al RTDAF (72.623 applicants), se encuentran con solicitud de restitución (en demanda) 7.269 solicitudes. Se destaca que de las solicitudes con demanda, 1.922 solicitudes ya cuentan con sentencia de los jueces de restitución de tierras que corresponden a 1.625 predios, 2.875 núcleos familiares beneficiados y 86.087 hectáreas.
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Survey to fill info-gap Survey 499 displaced households early 2014 – Last large scale survey in 2009, Gov/NU – Gutierrez, Land Observatory, 5 universities – Respondent driven sampling (snowball) Hidden population, no good registry Sensitive information, stigma Initial informants given by NGO/Municipality – Only municipalities with micro-focalized area Heckathorn (1997,2002), representative if – Possible connection between any displaced – No isolated groups or circular recruiting – Sufficient rounds (7) – Informant recruit new, monetary incentive + max 5 – Markov process, prob x1 = f(x0) → x7 = population – Only displaced HH in Bogota and Barranquilla – Weights calculated – 86% with weights vs. 84% without fear displacement
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Men more land, single mothers, single men, same education Large share remain singles after loosing spouse
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Divorce as important as death of spouse Less women intend to apply and return
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Similar knowledge of restitution program More formal landownership than expected Most important plot 88% only one plot 53% claim (some) title
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Hardly any progress in restitution process Few women will farm, many will sell
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Women fear more than men Direct threats/warning before chose to leave
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No support for joint titling if inherited land
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Women go to market alone (91%) Couple walk side by side (85%) Women can earn more money than men (90%) …but wives should obey husbands! Gender culture
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Women influence economic decisions – Women perceive only responsible, men joint responsability
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Conclusions Restitution slow and difficult process – Complicated evidence and judicial process – ’Bona-fide’ farmers evicted, more idle land Only some micro-focalized, coordination not possible – Prefer monetary compensation and urban life – Team does not find clear cases of return in Coast – A political compromise between full-fledged redistribution and large-scale agriculture? Women’s rights reasonably protected – Access to information and participation – Court can order joint titles against standing gender ideas – Women do not want to return!
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