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Children's Property and Inheritance Rights, HIV and Aids, and Social Protection in Southern and Eastern Africa
Dr Laurel L. Rose, Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
November 30, 2007

http://www.oxfam.org.uk/resources/learning/landrights/south.html

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Introduction
Previous study of the legal aspects of children's property and inheritance rights In a previous desk study of children's property and inheritance rights in southern and eastern Africa (Rose 2006), the author focused on the legal aspects of children's rights. The argument was made that children's property and inheritance rights have received little attention, despite the fact that many orphans are not only compelled to support themselves, but they also have to defend their property and inheritance rights against potential or actual usurpations by relatives, neighbours and strangers. Importantly, the relatives who usurp their property and inheritance rights are often the same people within their extended families who, in accordance with tradition, should be protecting their rights, i.e. their guardians and caregivers.

The author covered the following topics:

  1. the nature of children's property and inheritance rights
  2. the vulnerabilities of these rights (e.g. due to weak legislation, discriminatory customary practices, tenure insecurity, poverty, and inadequate documentation about births and deaths)
  3. the violations of these rights
  4. the protections afforded these rights in laws and policies
  5. the difficulties faced by children in protesting perceived violations of their property rights

Regarding the fourth topic, it should be recognized that a country's laws and policies may not fully protect children's property and inheritance rights, or otherwise provide children with the means to enforce their rights. Regarding the fifth topic, it should be recognized that children may not be in a good position to defend their property rights due to the barriers of information, time, status, youth and cost that they commonly encounter. On the subject of children's property and inheritance rights, the author defined such rights as the right to own, acquire (through purchase, gift, or inheritance), and dispose of tangible and intangible property, including land, housing, money, livestock, and crops.

More specifically, the author suggested that orphaned children should be guaranteed the following rights: to legal protection of their property and inheritance rights; to participate in and be informed about all decisions and dispositions regarding their parents' property; and to receive legal aid and the assistance of an advocate in order that they might claim their property and inheritance rights or otherwise protest violations of these rights.

Finally, the author argued that any local or national laws (customary or statutory) and policies which insufficiently address children's property and inheritance rights or otherwise impose undue hardships upon children in their efforts to maintain these rights, violate international human rights law - with guaranteed rights to information, to the protection of the law, to legal inheritance, and to effective remedy - and should therefore be amended or repealed. In an effort to promote children's property and inheritance rights while also suggesting ways to rectify violations of these rights, the author outlined the gaps in various national laws (mostly succession and land laws) and policies (mostly National Plans of Action). Thereafter, the author made numerous recommendations regarding actions that

Stakeholders should take to protect children's property and inheritance rights (e.g. design and implement legal and policy interventions, promote succession and estate-planning, develop new approaches to caregiving and guardianship, and develop a child-centered framework and advocate for children) as well as regarding research and development priorities that stakeholders should undertake to better understand and to promote children's property and inheritance rights (e.g. educate/train people and provide support to local authorities/Non-Governmental Organizations - NGOs).

The author argued that the devastating effects of the HIV/AIDS pandemic have transformed African communities to the extent that customary legal norms may no longer be adequate to address all aspects of the so-called "orphan problem", but also argued that existing statutory laws are not adequate to address all problems of orphans, including those related to property and inheritance. Therefore, although some members of African communities may be dissatisfied with customary norms, they may also reject a particular statutory law because they are unfamiliar with its provisions, are uncertain about how to apply it to their situation, believe that it would not support a finding to their advantage, or fear that it would subvert justice in their case.

Current study of the social protection aspect of children's property and inheritance rights In this current desk study, the focus is on the social protection aspect of children's property and inheritance rights, i.e. the responsibility of every society to ensure children's property and inheritance rights in order that they can achieve their livelihoods. Many children, particularly orphaned and vulnerable children (i.e. OVCs),1 do not have sustainable livelihoods: they lack material resources such as food, shelter, and bedding; they lack access to health and educational services, psychosocial support, and income generating activities; and they lack the capabilities, assets, and activities that would ensure their living (see Mchomvu and Ijumba 2006). Essentially, the livelihoods of OVCs are not sustainable because they are unable to use and access resources within the wider community to meet their immediate needs and are unable to cope with and recover from ongoing stresses and shocks. Some OVCs, particularly those living in the shadow of HIV/AIDS, are even less likely to have a sustainable livelihood. They are compelled to provide for themselves with little or no parental assistance and without adequate guardianship - often as household heads - and they must do so while burdened with the stigma and discrimination associated with HIV/AIDS.

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Notes

1. Vulnerable children are usually considered to be any children who lack family support, are poor, are disabled, are in prison, or who experience frequent changes in residence due to homelessness or refugee status. In the context of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, children are also made vulnerable by having a chronically ill parent or by living in a household where at least one adult has died in the last year. Orphans, who are a special category of vulnerable children, are considered to be any children who lack one or both parents. The literature refers to "single" orphans who have lost one parent as opposed to "double" orphans who have lost both parents. It also refers to "paternal" orphans who have lost their father as opposed to "maternal" orphans who have lost their mother. Moreover, the literature refers to several types of orphans according to the following factors: cause of orphaning, such as "war" orphans and "AIDS" orphans; support systems, such as "foster-care" orphans; and place of residence, such as "street" orphans" (Rose 2005: 912). In view of the stark realities faced by many children in southern and eastern Africa, this author argues that all children should be guaranteed basic rights that aim to secure their well-being, protect their interests, and ensure their ability to earn a current and future livelihood (see also Devereux and Sabates-Wheeler, 2004; Drimie, 2006; Rensburg et al, 2005).

The most important of these basic rights concerns property and inheritance. At the same time, in view of the current inadequacies of customary norms and the occasional resistance to statutory laws in the countries of the region (e.g. as documented in the case of Grace in Kenya; Rose, 2006: 31-2), this author also argues that the solution to orphans' property and inheritance problems must be in seeking a middle-ground between customary law and statutory law, whereby the standards that protect children's rights should be maintained, and the standards that inhibit or violate children's rights should be reformed or eliminated. Several ideas about how this middle-ground might be achieved through gradual processes of consultation and innovative problem-solving within communities will be discussed in this report.

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