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May 21st, 2012

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GLTN E-forum develops criteria for testing the gender responsiveness of tools

eforumscreen.jpgThe Global Land Tool Network (GLTN) facilitated a highly successful e-discussion forum, which significantly advanced the process of establishing evaluation criteria for testing the gender-responsive land tools. The e-forum, which took place between 8 September and 15 October 2008, was a follow up of the GLTN Grassroots Gender meeting 2007 in Lukenya, Kenya and the Land Professionals Gender meeting 2008 in Bagamayo, Tanzania. The e-forum was widely publicised within GLTN networks such as Huairou, FIG, UEL and ILC and other networks as a key component of the GLTN Gender Mechanism for developing gendered land tools. The objective of the e-discussion was to merge and to further develop the criteria for testing the gender responsiveness of large-scale tools from the two gender workshops.

The e-forum marked the first time that the criteria for testing the criteria for gendering land tools was systematically addressed. It attracted a wide range of stakeholders working on or interested in land, housing and property issues from gendered perspectives. These include land professionals, grassroots, and civil society including women’s advocacy groups, policymakers and researchers. In order to make the consultation accessible, simple and interesting, the e-discussion forum used the analogy of a train ride, to structure the consultations into several segments (stops), with each ‘ride’ advance a particular aspect of the discussion. The GLTN Secretariat served as the overall coordinator, serving alongside four moderators (designated for specific ‘rides’) who represented different regions, backgrounds and expertise in gender and land.

The e-forum started (8-15 September) withthe framing of the issues through identification of the relevant themes, contexts and methodologies relating to gender and land. The session looked into the key practical questions in order to develop criteria- what do we want to know, what will this tell us and where can we find this. The second component or ride (16-21 September) clustered or grouped the ideas/issues/themes from the consultations on evaluation criteria into sub-themes, through an easily accessible checklist. During the third component (24 September -1 October), the focus was on refining the criteria and advancing the criteria and indicators. The fourth stage (2-9 October) presented opportunities for practical testing, looking into whether and how the evaluation criteria under discussion are realistic, and how it can be used, and by whom. The final journey (10-15 October) consolidated the progress, considered the criteria for new tools and finalised the e-forum criteria matrix from the e-forum.

The e-forum discussions were pioneering in several ways. It brought together diverse groups to consider the implications of a number of complex issues confronting the gendering of tools. These included responding to the heterogeneity of women, the nature of women’s participation and leadership, engagement with formal and informal system, adopting cross-cultural approaches, recognising different tenures through a continuum of rights, enhancing participation in land markets and dealing with gendered power relations. A wide range of tools included land titling, certification, registration, administration, planning, mainstreaming, budgeting, leasing, inheritance and licensing were discussed. Among the case studies discussed were Brazil, Ecuador, Ethiopia, Germany, Ghana, Guatemala, Mauritius, Philippines, South Africa, and Tanzania. The consultations focused and succeeded in the task of producing a matrix of evaluation criteria for gendering large scale land tools, though this will be a work in progress. The output from the e-forum is to be presented at the GLTN events at the World Urban Forum IV in Nanjing, China in November 2008, and feed into the piloting of the criteria in 2009. The Criteria Matrix and the deliberations of the e-forum are available on the GLTN website.