Rocheleau, D., & Edmunds, D. (1997). Women, men and trees: Gender, power and property in forest and agrarian landscapes. World development, 25(8), 1351-1371.
Summary. -This
paper proposes a revision of the concept of property commonly associated with land
in analyzing the gender dimensions of tree tenure. Unlike two-dimensional maps of land ownership, tree
tenure is characterized by nested and overlapping rights, which arc products of social and ecological
diversity as well as the complex connections between various groups of people and resources. Such
complexity implies that approaches to improving equity using concepts of property based on land may
be too simplistic. Rather than incorportating both women and trees into existing property frameworks,
we argue that a more appropriate approach would begin by recognizing legal and theoretical ways of
looking at property that reflect the realities and aspirations of women and men as well as the complexity
and diversity of rural landscapes.
Through a selective review of the literature, particularly in Africa. and illustrative case studies based
on our fieldwork. we explore the “gendered” nature of resource use and access with respect to trees and
forests, and examine distinct strategies to address gender inequalities therein. A review of the theoretical
and historical background of land tenure illustrates the limitations of “two-dimensional”
maps associated
with land tenure in delineating boundaries of nested bundles of rights and management of trees and
forests by different actors. The introduction of gender adds another dimension to the analysis of the
multidimensional
niches in the rural landscape defined by space, time, specific plants. products, and
uses. Gender is a complicating factor due to the unequal power relattonships between men and women in
most societies. These power relationships. however. are subject to change. Rather than adopting an
artificial dichotomy
between “haves” and “have riots”” (usually linked with men and women,
respectively, in discussions of land tenure). we argue that gendered domains in tree tenure may be both
complementary
and negotiahle. If resource tenure regimes are negotiable. they can he affected by
changes in power relations between men and women. This idea has important policy implications. In
many discussions of tenure, rights are often assumed to be exogenous or externally determined. The
negotiability of tenure rights gives policy makers and communities another lever with which to promote
a more equitable distribution of right\ to the management and use of natural resources. 0 1997 Elsevier
Science Ltd