Community Land Access & Security
Housing, and the right to adequate housing, is a subject that affects every human on earth and their right to dignity, prosperity and peace. Prindex data continues to underscore the stark reality that one in four adults feels insecure about their tenure. The Community Land Access and Security program seeks to positively disrupt empirical causes of property and tenure insecurity.
The right to housing is an intersectional issue of economic, social, and cultural dignity for individuals and communities. Security of home and property is a fundamental right that many times is not upheld by governments and individualist-driven societies. The Community Land Access and Security Program works to foster social equity, inclusion, and restore justice to low income and marginalized communities in domestic and international spheres.
We are fighting for the right to home for our world’s most vulnerable communities. Community Land Access and Security advocates for:
Protection against forced Eviction
Anti-Land Grabbing Policies
Protections of Indigenous and Communal Land
Community Land Trust Model
Urban Community Land Protections
Black Agricultural Restorative Justice (domestic)
Slum-Dweller Squatters and Informal Settlement Rights and Protections
Anti-Displacement Protections
Housing as a Home, not as an Investment
Security of Tenure
The Community Land Access and Security Program proudly works directly with activists and organizations that champion community-led initiatives, such as: UrbaMonde, World Habitat Forum, Center For CLT Innovations, Resilient Cities, Grounded Solutions Network.
In her documentary film PUSH, Leilani Farha, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Adequate Housing, reveals the human toll that global gentrification trends are taking, by capturing the personal testaments of those living in cities around the world who are experiencing the particular kind of housing insecurity that results from these trends.