CARE CARE
Tell-A-Friend

Get E-mail Updates:
Existing Member?
Login Now!

CARE's Blog

newsroomPrint this PageE-mail this Page
Home » Newsroom » Articles » 2007 » April » Women Face Environmental Degradation In Africa

Women Face Environmental Degradation in Africa
CARE Releases Report on Impact, Progress

NAIROBI, Kenya (April 20, 2007) - Degradation of environmental resources and "grabbing" of these increasingly scarce assets by the rich and powerful are fundamental obstacles to achieving the Millennium Development Goals and 2015 targets set by the United Nations. In a report entitled Reclaiming Rights and Resources released on the occasion of Earth Day, CARE presents personal accounts from across Africa of how environmental problems directly impact the lives of the rural poor and specifically the lives of women.

Click here to download Reclaiming Rights and Resources (PDF, 1MB)

"The negative outcomes of the loss and/or degradation of natural resources often fall most heavily on women, adding to their responsibilities and multiple roles in families and communities," says Phil Franks, poverty and environment advisor with CARE, the poverty-fighting organization working in 66 countries. "However, in many situations, women also hold the key to solving these problems and can bring environmental concerns to the attention of society in a powerful way."

Reclaiming Rights and Resources presents seven case studies from across Africa that focus on three types of threatened environmental resources: land, forests, and water. In each case women share their stories of how the loss or degradation of such critical resources has adversely affected their lives and what they are doing to address these problems.

There is the case of Ama Ntowaa, a Ghanaian woman who in 2004 lay down in front of a bulldozer to prevent the village chief who had struck a deal with a logging company from removing timber logs off her land. In Niger, "barefoot lawyers" try to secure land for women in case of divorce and address the practice of seclusion of women as a result of land scarcity and the denial of property rights.

"When the rural environment becomes unsustainable, it's the women whose lives are most disrupted," says Professor Wangari Maathai, Nobel laureate in 2004 and founder of the Green Belt Movement, in her foreword to the publication. "If we conserved better, conflict over land, water and forests would be far less. Protecting the global environment is directly related to securing peace."

Until recently, since the impact of climate change and its profound implications for humanity have become clearer, environmental concerns were often considered a preoccupation of wealthy countries. "Politicians are now waking up to the fact that addressing environmental problems is fundamental to the fight against poverty and a precondition to achieving social justice," says Franks of CARE.

Media Contacts:


Atlanta: Rick Perera, rperera@care.org, (404) 979-9453
Nairobi: Beatrice M. Spadacini, spadacini@ci.or.ke, +254 20 2807 184

Home | Search | Site Map | Feedback | Privacy | Terms | Global Sites |