Juliana Nnoko
Juliana Nnoko is a senior researcher in the women’s rights division at Human Rights Watch. Her work focuses on land and land-based resource rights, violence against women, and on the impacts of large-scale commercial land deals, tourism development, and armed conflict on access to land, including for women, in rural, Indigenous, and Afro-descendant communities in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. She has carried out research and advocacy on a number of human rights issues, including the rights of Maasai communities to ancestral land in Tanzania; armed conflict and Afro-descendant women’s access to land in Colombia; violence against women during the Covid-19 pandemic in Kenya; the rights of women to matrimonial property in Kenya; loss of land and risks to peatland by oil palm plantations in Indonesia; rights to customary land and forced evictions by commercial farmers in Zambia; and the right to housing more broadly.
Her work incorporates an intersectional lens to investigate land rights violations related to gender, race, ethnicity, and indigeneity. Most recently, her research focused on Indigenous Maasai women in Tanzania; Iban Dayak women in West Kalimantan, and forest-dependent Orang Rimba women in Jambi, Indonesia; and Afro-descendant women in Nariño, Colombia. Juliana has authored numerous Human Rights Watch reports, she has been published in peer-reviewed journals on the right to land, she is a contributing author of an academic book on Covid-19 and Human Rights; and she has written for publications including Aljazeera, Reuters, and Foreign Policy.
Prior to joining Human Rights Watch, Juliana taught at Iowa State University, US, and the University of Buea, Cameroon. She holds a PhD in Sociology and Sustainable Agriculture from Iowa State University, and a Master’s in Public Policy from the University of Northern Iowa.
Articles Authored
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August 14, 2024
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April 27, 2023
Tanzania: Maasai Forcibly Displaced for Game Reserve
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February 22, 2023
Tanzania Should Halt Plan to Relocate Maasai Pastoralists
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February 2, 2023
Tanzania's Eviction of Maasai Pastoralists Continues
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September 2, 2020
Cities Forcibly Evict Residents in South Africa
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August 20, 2020
Renters in England Are Braced for Mass Evictions
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June 27, 2020
Divorced Women Struggle to Claim Property
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June 10, 2020
Nairobi Evicts 8,000 People Amidst a Pandemic and Curfew
Reports Authored
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“We Must Ask for What Is Already Ours”
Afro-descendant Women and Access to Land in Alto Mira y Frontera, Colombia
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Tanzania: Maasai Forcibly Displaced for Game Reserve
Provide Redress; Adopt New Conservation Model After Consultations
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“When We Lost the Forest, We Lost Everything”
Oil Palm Plantations and Rights Violations in Indonesia
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