Women’s land rights under the Mozambican Land Law: An ethnographic study of the matrilineal district of Majune, Niassa province, northern Mozambique
Abstract
The Mozambican Land Law (Lei de Terra) that was passed in 1997 seeks to formalize
customary rights at a community level and provide equal access to land for men and
women, while securing external investors access to land for their investments. This
ethnographic study explores women’s land rights in Majune district, Niassa province,
under the Mozambican Land Law. It focuses on the implications of the matrilineal
structure prevalent in Majune on women’s rights to land in relation to the
implementation of the Land Law. It further identifies obstacles for women related to
their land claims. The questions that the study answers concern the interaction of the
formalization of customary land rights with the matrilineal kinship inheritance system
in Majune, the implications of the implementation of the Land Law for women’s land
rights, and finally what obstacles women encounter in relation to their land claims.
The main findings illustrate that women’s land rights in Majune are embedded in
social and cultural relations that both influence their access to land and their lack of
decision-making power regarding their land. The matrilineal system protects women’s
access to land, however the decision-making authority generally remains with their
male relatives or husbands. The main obstacles women encounter in relation to their
land claims are maintained through socially constructed gender roles that restrain their
abilities to enforce their land rights.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2017-07-03Author
Aradóttir, Anna Gudrún
Keywords
Mozambican Land Law
Majune district
women’s land rights
matriliny
land tenure
formalization of customary rights
Series/Report no.
Global Studies
2016:13
Language
eng