International: Women's Property Rights
Some previous efforts have been made to document progress toward the protection of women’s property rights. For example, the 2000 Progress of the World’s Women report from the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) examined national governments’ constitutional provisions for gender equality and nondiscrimination. Other publications examine legislative frameworks in specific regions or across a specific set of countries. These include a review of 10 sub-Saharan countries by the Centre for Housing Rights and Evictions (COHRE) and a review of four eastern African countries by the U.N. Habitat Centre. Human Rights Watch and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations have published case studies of legislative frameworks of countries including Kenya, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe. ICRW built upon these and other resources to compile a database of relevant laws in 102 countries: 51 across the different regions of Africa, 30 from Asia (including the Caucasus region), and 21 from Latin America and the Caribbean.
The assessment covered countries’ constitutions; civil codes and other laws governing family, personal, marital and succession matters; and land and agrarian laws. Due to limitations of time and resources, the information was largely obtained from secondary sources. Therefore, care needs to be exercised in drawing comparisons, since it is possible that a country may have legal provisions that have not been addressed in the secondary literature. Nevertheless, by establishing a framework of core legal protections for women’s property rights, the study is able to broadly gauge the adequacy of a country’s legal protections.
You can download the document, 'Connecting Rights to Reality: A Progressive Framework of Core Legal Protections for women's Property Rights' here: http://www.icrw.org/docs/property-rights/2007-connecting-rights-to-reality.pdf