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AIDS Care
Psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV
Volume 26, 2014 - Issue 6
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Articles

What community-level strategies are needed to secure women's property rights in Western Kenya? Laying the groundwork for a future structural HIV prevention intervention

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Pages 754-757 | Received 12 Feb 2013, Accepted 12 Sep 2013, Published online: 14 Oct 2013
 

Abstract

Despite the recognized need for structural-level HIV prevention interventions that focus on economic empowerment to reduce women's HIV risks, few science-based programs have focused on securing women's land ownership as a primary or secondary HIV risk reduction strategy. The current study focused on a community-led land and property rights model that was implemented in two rural areas of western Kenya where HIV prevalence was high (24–30%) and property rights violations were common. The program was designed to reduce women's HIV risk at the community level by protecting and enhancing women's access to and ownership of land. Through in-depth interviews with 50 program leaders and implementers of this program we sought to identify the strategies that were used to prevent, mediate, and resolve property rights violations. Results included four strategies: (1) rights-based education of both women and men individually and at the community level, (2) funeral committees that intervene to prevent property grabbing and disinheritance, (3) paralegal training of traditional leaders and community members and local adjudication of cases of property rights violations, and (4) referring property rights violations to the formal justice system when these are not resolved at the community level. Study participants underscored that local mediation of cases resulted in a higher success rate than women experienced in the formal court system, underscoring the importance of community-level solutions to property rights violations. The current study assists researchers in understanding the steps needed to prevent and resolve women's property rights violations so as to bolster the literature on potential structural HIV prevention interventions. Future research should rigorously test property rights programs as a structural HIV prevention intervention.

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health, University of California, San Francisco Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology Center for AIDS Research, P30-AI027763. The authors are grateful to the anonymous reviewers and the editor. The authors are also grateful to the Director of the KEMRI and the Director of the Center for Microbiology Research at KEMRI for their guidance and support of this work. We recognize with appreciation our KEMRI research staff – Beryl Oyier, Faith M'mbone, Eunice Were, and Millicent Oundo – for their work on data collection and transcription.

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