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	  News in 2023
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	Reflections on UN CSW67 
		7 March, 2023, New York City, US
		Claire Buxton visited the UN Compound in New York to 
		participate in a session on Innovation and Digital Technology  -  A 
		facilitator to Secure Land Tenure and Natural Resources for All 
		organised by S4HL (Stand for Her Land) during the Commission of the 
		Status of Women CSW67.
		Claire represented FIG Commission 7 Working Group on Women’s Access to 
		Land with S4HL
		
			
				|  
 | Up until last week, I was of the impression that if a girl, 
				young woman, or woman (including those who identify as such) has 
				someone who believes in them, then they can achieve their 
				dreams. With only a flying visit to CSW67, I've learnt from the 
				‘horse’s mouth’ that it is naive to think this when a system of 
				power and privilege is up against you.
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		Large numbers of widows are disinherited from their lands, women are 
		subjected to online gender-based violence more and more, countries like 
		Tuvalu are ‘not drowning, but fighting’ to create a digital twin of 
		their ancestral lands before/as they are forced to move as the sea rises 
		and cyclones consume them.
		The Kenyan government aims to reach 20% of all land being registered 
		in the name of women by this year, 2023. As a woman from Aotearoa New 
		Zealand where most properties are held in joint ownership or where the 
		numbers are close to 17% sole female ownership versus 19% male 
		ownership, this seemed an achievable goal. Looking at the World Bank 
		statistics from 2021 though, there was about 7% of women who own land 
		alone between the ages of 15-49 in Kenya (https://genderdata.worldbank.org/indicators/sg-own-ld/). 
		They are a fair way off and during this event, admitted they need help 
		and have reached out to partners. 
		I joined thousands of representatives from around our globe at the 
		Commission on the Status of Women 67 at UN HQ in New York. The 
		experience was humbling, moving, and educational. I’ll be writing a more 
		detailed article somewhere shortly, with the help of my FIG colleagues 
		because there is too much to share in a LinkedIn post. But here goes an 
		attempted summary:
		As a representative of FIG, I personally shared some concrete ideas 
		on how surveyors are key and will continue to be key as we embrace 
		innovations and digital technology to advance gender equality and 
		ensuring that secure women land rights and properties is central to the 
		work we do towards a sustainable world.
		Other panelists representing views from the Chief Registrar of Kenya, 
		a PhD from UN Women, South Sudan and IGAD, IFAD, Landesa, Stand For Her 
		Land, and a previous Women in Peace Coordinator from Guatamala. Other 
		countries represented in the room were Tanzania, Mexico, Norway, US, and 
		others I am certain
		
			- Women (especially marginalised rural women) need to be at the 
			table 
- Sex disaggregated data is a basic necessity!
- Digitalisation is part of the seismic shift coming our way but 
			the divide can grow without responsible measures in place
- Safe, affordable, and inclusive technology is required
- Recognise culture, religion, and custom in practices
- Large-scale land investments (grabbing) remain a great threat
- Allies are needed! Its all well and good speaking in a room of 
			feminists however, when we leave the room, a mindset shift happens. 
			We need allies and we need the tools to speak with those who are not 
			yet feminists
- Solution examples from Guatemala were a group of 15 Indigenous 
			leaders setting up a grassroots movement and also women making use 
			of GNSS/GPS for mapping municipal lands for claiming urban food 
			rights and using drones for projecting flood risks as well as 
			mapping land rights
 
		 
		Claire Buxton
		March 2023