Price:
US$ 15
Keywords: Women,
Access to Land, Housing, Property, Inheritance, Gender
Housing policy,
Abstract:
This thesis raises questions about women's access to
property, (land and housing in Kenya. The gender contract
determines men's and women's relationship to each other and
to property. Such contracts are the invisible agreements found
in every society about how men and women should behave. Empirical
data from peasants plantation and urban poor case study settings
demonstrate that there are two gender contract in Kenya, the
subsistence gender contract and the market gender contract.
According to both, women cannot inherit property. Also, women
are responsible for providing their families' subsistence,
including the provision of water, fuel, food and building
materials which are obtained from natural resources. According
o the market gender contract, women may, however, buy property.
This contract prevails more in urban areas, although both
contracts operate in each of the three settings. According
to both women carry heavy workloads and familial responsibilities.
The terms of the gender contract are less onerous for men,
who also control property which they may inherit as free capital.
A model is presented showing how micro level changes takes
place by means of women's responses to the situation in which
they find themselves. Women's actions are based on their strategies
for improving their lives, collective action is one such strategy
with important implications for housing.
The Kenyan gender contracts delineate a power relationship
in which women's lack of access to property keeps them in
a subordinate position to men and requires them to provide
subsistence The power relationship, based on economic inequality,
does not accord with the normative concept of human rights.
The fact that women in the study adhere to the subsistence
part of the gender contract without question, although many
resent their lack of property rights, suggests that women
see the provision of subsistence as a basic human value. It
is suggested that the provision of subsistence should be a
responsibility of both men and women in Kenya, and that the
concept of subsistence be revived as a normative value and
economic principle.
There are thousands of women's community based organization
in Kenya, a significant proportion of which are involved in
property acquisition and development, or the improvement
of housing. This potential for housing production in Kenya
remains largely unrecognized. A gendered housing policy is
needed based on women's property rights and housing production
capability. It should support the values and objectives of
women's groups.