拥抱危险的避难所:肯尼亚农村的妇女、土地法和生计脆弱性

Mary Thamari-odhiambo
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摘要

在非洲,人们对管理资源,特别是土地的法律在性别方面越来越感兴趣。与土地有关的法律改革产生了可能有用的条例,并支持平等的土地权利。然而,这些改革的背景包括土地纠纷、对法律的抵制、对妇女的暴力和执法不力,导致对妇女的不公正,对弱势社区的家庭产生普遍影响。作者使用重点民族志研究方法,调查了2015年11月至2016年8月期间妇女的土地权利。采用了深入访谈、焦点小组讨论、审查档案记录和观察。研究发现,在长期生计脆弱的情况下,如肯尼亚西南部的卢奥人,寻求庇护以摆脱生计困难的妇女采用两种策略来巩固其安全。她们从婚姻住所迁移到渔村,并要求根据习惯法由男性拥有的婚姻土地。这些策略产生了社会困境和风险操作。为减轻与土地有关的冲突而颁布的成文法土地法破坏了有利于男子的现有习惯法土地法。因此,女性对土地的要求,以及支持土地所有权平等的土地法,动摇了男性的男子气概。通过借鉴妇女的经历,我展示了在生计紧张的背景下,土地法、持久的不公正和性别关系之间的交集。
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Embracing risky refuge: women, land laws and livelihood vulnerabilities in rural Kenya
There has been a growing interest in laws governing resources particularly land in reference to gender in Africa. Law reforms in relation to land have produced potentially useful regulations and espoused egalitarian land rights. However, the backdrop to these reforms contains a scene of land disputes, resistance to laws, violence against women and poor enforcement leading to injustices to women with a pervasive effect on families in vulnerable communities. Using focused ethnographic research methods, the writer investigated women's land rights between November 2015 and August 2016. In-depth interviews, focus group discussions, review of archival records and observations were utilised. The study found that in contexts of prolonged livelihood vulnerabilities, as in the case of the Luo people of south-western Kenya, women seeking refuge from livelihood difficulties employ two strategies to anchor their security. They migrate from marital homes to fishing villages and also lay claim to marital land, which is held by men according to customary laws. These strategies produce social dilemmas and risky manoeuvering. Statutory land laws that are enacted to mitigate land related conflicts undermine the existing customary land laws that advantage men. Therefore, women's land claims, and statutory land laws that espouse equality in land ownership, destabilise men's sense of masculinity. By drawing on the experiences of women, I show the intersection between land laws, enduring injustices and gender relations in a context of strained livelihoods.
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