• Kenya
  • Resources
  • Business Services
  • Access to Land
  • Access to Land

Quick information guide

Matrimonial Property Act, 2013 has provisions on:

Equal status of spouses (Section 4)

A married women has the same rights as a married man:

  • to acquire, administer, hold, control, use and dispose of property whether movable or immovable;
  • to enter into a contract; and
  • to sue and be sued in her own name.

Special provisions on Matrimonial property (Section 12)

  • Matrimonial property cannot be sold, leased or mortgaged during a monogamous marriage without the consent of both spouses (See section 12(1));
  • Spouses in marriages, including the man and any of the man’s wives in the case of a polygamous marriage, have an interest in matrimonial property capable of protection by caveat, caution or any law in force on registration of title deeds;

Divorce or dissolution of polygamous marriage:

Matrimonial property act (Section 8) clarifies:

  • Matrimonial property acquired by the man after the man marries another wife shall be regarded as owned by the man and the wives taking into account any contributions made by the parties;
  • it is possible for a wife to hold her matrimonial property with the husband separate from that of the other wives; any wife can own matrimonial property equally with the husband without the participation of the other wife or wives.

Read more

Access to land

The Kenyan constitution under Article 40(1) ensured every person has equal rights either individually or in association with others. These rights extend even to the right to acquire and own property in any part of Kenya.

Women in Kenya  have  access  to  land  but  lack  control  over it,  this in turn stops them  from  using  title deeds  as  a form  of  collateral  when seeking financing for their businesses.

This challenge limits the improvement of their economic status.  Kenya has undertaken legal reforms that will help women acquire property.

 Women can now buy and register land individually and they can inherit land from their parents and husbands because of the matrimonial property act.

In 2018 the Kenya Land Alliance disaggregated and analyzed 1,000,099 out of the about 3,200,000 title deeds issued by the Government of Kenya from 2013 to 2017.

In this audit, KLA found out that only 103,043 titles representing 10.3 percent were issued to women while 865,095 titles representing 86.5 percent went to men.

In terms of hectares, out of 10,129,704 ha of land titled; women got 163,253 ha representing a paltry 1.62 percent, while men got 9,903,304 ha representing 97.76 percent.

Read more

angle-left AMERICAN JEWISH WORLD SERVICE (AJWS)

AMERICAN JEWISH WORLD SERVICE (AJWS)

In Kenya, AJWS focuses on defends communities’ access to land, water and other natural resources that are being exploited by irresponsible development projects.

AJWS grantees also work to end violence and discrimination against – and create opportunities for Kenyan women, girls and LGBTQI+ people.

Read more;

 

The project

  • LAND, WATER AND CLIMATE JUSTICE

AJWS supports communities working to slow climate change, stop harmful development projects, and protect the land, water and natural resources that they depend on for survival. We support a constellation of grassroots organizations and determined advocates, as they shape powerful social movements to ensure that land, water and natural resources are used equitably and sustainably.

Read more; 

 

In Kenya, AJWS:

  • Seeks to stop or delay the construction of development projects that threaten local people’s means of survival and advocating for communities to be consulted in the use of their land and other natural resources
  •  
  • Attracts media attention to local land rights struggles and pressuring investors to consider the human cost of their projects

 

Read more; 

 

Contacts

Email;