DISPLACED WOMEN’S RIGHTS TO HOUSING, LAND AND PROPERTYNo Place Like Home: An Assessment of the Housing, Land and Property Rights of
Palestinian Refugee Women in Camps and Gatherings in Lebanon
Dalia Aranki - Programme Manager, NRC Lebanon
25 March 2014
NRC ICLA • Rights based humanitarian
intervention• Information Counseling and
Legal Assistance (ICLA) programs in 18 countries
• Legal assistance (formal and traditional systems)
• Focus on housing land and property (HLP) and specific assistance provided to women
No Place Like Home: An Assessment of the Housing, Land and Property Rights of Palestinian Refugee Women in Camps and Gatherings in Lebanon
Main purposes of the Assessment in Lebanon Identify the main housing, land and property (HLP) issues
affecting Palestinian refugee women. Examine the challenges faced in seeking enjoyment of their
HLP rights. Explore how the protection of these rights might be promoted
and strengthened Outline the challenges women encounter in attempting to
secure their HLP rights in Lebanon: owing to their status as refugees in Lebanon and,
owing to their particular circumstances as women.
Overview: Palestinian refugees in Lebanon
Under UNRWA’s mandate.
Live in official camps established and managed by UNRWA or in gatherings.
Not legally considered as owners of their homes.
Conflict in Syria - highlighted housing situation.
Formal context/Legal context
No rights to property – since 2001 (2001 Law) , Palestinian refugees are prohibited from having any legal right to property.
Lack of information/understanding – of the law and its consequences.
Informal system of buying/selling land – not recognised by Lebanese law.
Limited rehabilitation or improvements to housing permitted – legally required permits are almost impossible for individuals to obtain.
Lack of security of tenure – little legal protection against forced eviction/ risk of forced evictions at any time.
International legal obligations breached – although supercede national laws.
Customary practices within refugee camps and gatherings guided by strong patriarchal hierarchies.
Non-systematic or inconsistent way of dealing with Palestinian refugee women’s HLP rights.
Women’s HLP rights are not widely recognised as individuated or in need of specific protection.
Familial context
Case Study
Samar says: “They will not give me the right to go and live
there. They say that it is registered in
my husband’s name and I must
get his authorisation”.
No Place Like Home: An Assessment of the Housing, Land and Property Rights of Palestinian Refugee Women in Camps and Gatherings in Lebanon
RECOMMENDATIONS
Formal context Further understanding of the
impact of the 2001 Law. More efforts to advocate for
reform of the 2001 Law. Use of international law to
challenge the consequences of the 2001 Law.
Improved recognition of importance of HLP rights for Palestinian refugees in Lebanon.
No Place Like Home: An Assessment of the Housing, Land and Property Rights of Palestinian Refugee Women in Camps and Gatherings in Lebanon
RECOMMENDATIONS
Familial context Further understanding of the
informal and customary mechanisms.
Raise awareness of access to HLP rights within the customary mechanisms.
Identify ways to strengthen access to HLP rights through customary mechanisms.
Support legal empowerment of Palestinian refugee women.
Next Steps
THANK YOUFor more information: womenshlp.nrc.no
www.nrc.no
www.nrc.no/syriaresponse