 My name is Violet Shibute. I'm a grassroots woman from Kenya. I'm a member and a founder of an organization called Shibuya Community Health Workers, which is a grassroots women-led community-based organization that has been working on health-related issues, and we are also active in working on women land rights. We are members of Groots Kenya and Wairo Commission, which is a global space for women working on various issues at the grassroots level. In this book, my role has been to show what grassroots women have been doing for a long time to respond to women land rights in relation to agriculture. I think for time in memorial women have been, grassroots women have been seen as beneficiaries of projects and not change agents. So in this book, my role was to show how grassroots women have been responding to their land rights through innovations that have been working for them in their community, like formation of community watchdog groups, which have then resulted in formation of women collective farming groups that have been helping women not only to begin for their land rights and go for their land rights, but also to ensure that they are able to have projects that will respond to agricultural productivity for their households. So in this book, mainly I've been showing how if grassroots women are supported their innovations are strengthened. What could be the difference in both enabling women to access their land rights and also enabling women to participate actively in agriculture and produce enough for their communities and their households.