Originally appeared on the Inter Press Service (IPS).
BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe, Apr 10 2014 (IPS) – It is harvest season in Zimbabwe and Janet Zondo is pressed to find space on the piece of land she is farming to erect a makeshift granary. Zando says she could very well build a miniature silo, judging by the size of the maize crop that she is preparing to harvest.
But Zondo is not a communal farmer somewhere deep in the rural areas. She is one of the many residents in Bulawayo’s high-density urban suburbs who have taken to farming vacant plots of land here after last year’s unexpected rains filled rivers, destroyed dams and claimed lives.
In the residential suburbs of Tshabalala, Sizinda and Nkulumane, here in Zimbabwe’s second-largest city, vacant plots of land are flourishing with maize[…]
If globally women were given title deeds to land, it will help contribute to the sustainability of farming projects as owning resources provides some “incentive” for women to continue farming, said Karol Boudreaux, a land expert with the Cloudburst Group, a U.S.-based think tank.
Read the full article on IPS.