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Women, Land and Justice in Tanzania (Paperback)
Loot Price: R405
Discovery Miles 4 050
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Women, Land and Justice in Tanzania (Paperback)
Series: Eastern Africa Series
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Loot Price R405
Discovery Miles 4 050
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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PAPERBACK FOR SALE IN AFRICA ONLY Reveals the impact on women of
post-1990s land reforms in Eastern Africa and the ways in which
these are overridden in spite of law. Recent decades have seen a
wave of land law reforms across Africa, in the context of a "land
rush" and land-grabbing. But how has this been enacted on the
ground and, in particular, how have women experienced this? This
book seeksto re-orientate current debates on women's land rights
towards a focus on the law in action. Drawing on the author's
ethnographic research in the Arusha region of Tanzania, it explores
how the country's land law reforms have impacted on women's legal
claims to land. Centring on cases involving women litigants, the
book considers the extent to which women are realising their
interests in land through land courts and follows the progression
of women's claims to land - from their social origins through
processes of dispute resolution to judgment. Dancer's work explores
three central issues. First, it considers the nature of women's
claims to land in Tanzanian family contexts,the value of land in an
era of land reform and the 'land rush' across Africa, and the
extent to which the social issues raised are addressed by
Tanzania's current laws and legal system. Secondly, it examines how
agency and power relations between social and legal actors engaged
in legal processes affect women's access to justice and the
progression of claims. Thirdly, it explores Tanzanian concepts of
justice and rights and how women's claims have been judged by land
courts in practice. Helen Dancer is a lecturer in Law at the
University of Brighton. She practised as a barrister in England
specialising in family legal aid cases prior to training as a legal
anthropologist. She is also a consultant for Future Agricultures at
IDS, University of Sussex. Her areas of research interest include
law and development, gender and land, and human rights and legal
pluralism.
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