These are the stories of millions of people in our world today, from Tanzania to the Philippines to Mexico. Whether they live in cities or in rural areas, the majority of the world’s poor lives without legal rights to their property, in economic and social exclusion.
Exclusion is the rul;fair and equitable rule of law is the exception. As long as half the world’s poor lives outside recognized and enforceable laws, they will never know prosperity.
Uganda: Crouch and Poach
Maryam Tusabe always found a
way to support herself, from
managing a hair salon to growing yams. In 1994, the mother of two
adopted girls
bought a plot of land in the
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Maryam Tusabe and her two children in their home in the Kampala district of Uganda. |
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Victoria Kirunda, FIDA Uganda, and Cate Ambrose, Legal Empowerment, examine Maryam's handwritten land contract. |
Victoria Kirunda, a legal
officer with Uganda
Association of Women Lawyers (FIDA
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A market similar to the one where Maryam sells her yams. Maryam is now forced to split her profits with a neighbor who stole her land and a bodyguard. |
If Maryam’s land sale agreement were registered as a legal
interest, she could clearly prove the boundaries of her property. But
at $400,
legal registration is out of her reach, and the sale agreement
recognized under
customary law has not protected her rights in the formal legal system
Uganda: Unlawful Eviction
Cissy Nakayiza bought a piece
of land in the Bundumnaya
Wakiso district outside of
Cissy had a hand written letter
of agreement which showed
her right to the land. She could have used that letter to register the
plot of
land formally, but Cissy did not have the US$400 to do so.
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Cissy
Nakayiza's land
contract was formally registered by a third party, who evicted Cissy
and build a new house on the plot. Cissy has since moved back in with
her parents and sibilings. |
Without Cissy’s knowledge, the widow sold her property to a third party, who promptly evicted Cissy and build a new house on the land.
Cissy has tried to bring the case to the local courts, but
because her title is a hand written piece of paper and due to an
increasing number
of forgeries, the magistrates are skeptical of the document’s
legality. Cissy has
been forced to move to her relatives’ home, where without the
land to cultivate
crops, she is both without a house and without a source of income.












