The World Bank Group Forest Carbon Partnership Facility commissioned Resource Equity to undertake these studies for the project, Understanding and Strengthening Gender Equity in Land and Forest Tenure in REDD+. These previously unpublished studies were used to inform the project’s final synthesis report. Included Countries: Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Dominican Republic, Fiji, Mexico, Mozambique, Nepal, Nicaragua, Republic of Congo, Vietnam. Authors: Bledsoe, D.; Giovarelli, R.; Lastrarria-Cornhill, S.; Rugadya, M.; Scalise, E.
Record Country: Mexico
Possibilities for Gender Equity in Land and Forest Tenure in REDD+ Programming%3$s>
Law of the National Institute of Women (LNIW)%3$s>
By Kat Oak
Ley del Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres.
Mexico Agrarian Law%3$s>
By Kat Oak
CONTINUE READING Mexico Agrarian Law 1 min read
General Law for Equality between Women and Men%3$s>
By Kat Oak
Ley General para la Igualdad entre Mujeres y Hombres
On Equal Ground: Promising Practices for Realizing Women’s Rights in Collectively Held Lands%3$s>
By Kat Oak
Detailing case studies from five communities around the world showing promising approaches to securing equal tenure rights for women and the conditions that enabled these communities to do so.
The role of property rights in shaping the effectiveness of protected areas and resisting forest loss in the Yucatan Peninsula%3$s>
This research paper investigates how a common conservation intervention (protected areas), has varying impacts depending on the underlying property rights and the profitability of forests.
What Men Have to Do With It: Public Policies that Promote Gender Equality%3$s>
Property Rights and Resource Governance Country Profile: Mexico%3$s>
Mexico Civil Code%3$s>
CONTINUE READING Mexico Civil Code 1 min read
Mexico Constitution%3$s>
CONTINUE READING Mexico Constitution 1 min read