
The Documentary Podcast Madagascar: From famine to hope
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Mar 25, 2026 Huli Raubina, a nutrition and gender specialist with FAO Madagascar, explains how women’s land rights and agroecology shape resilience. Short scenes cover women forming land collectives, agroecological techniques that rebuild soils and seed systems, and the links between secure land access and stronger family nutrition. The narrative moves from drought and deforestation to community-led recovery and calls for systemic, women‑focused policy change.
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Women Rent Collective Land To Make Decisions
- A female-only collective rents and owns land together to bypass customary inheritance rules that exclude women.
- Laluna describes 60 active women in the group and saving money to rent more land so they can decide without consulting husbands.
Legal Rights Don't Overturn Customary Land Barriers
- Madagascar's 2005 land reform legally grants equal land rights but customary laws still block women's effective access.
- Women often lack money and social permission to buy or control land despite legal equality.
Lilia's Long Fight Turned Her Into A Role Model
- Lilia recounts years of family resistance to her farming role and how her success changed perceptions.
- Initially criticised by in-laws for working outside, she now owns many lands and is considered a role model in the family.
