This paper intends to explore if in some cases of national implementation processes of the first UN Security Council Resolution on Women, Peace and Security, the n. 1325 of 2000 (the International Year for the Culture of Peace, in UNESCO's agenda), the configuration of women's access to land has been considered - at the policy level, leaving an evaluation of impact for a further study. The leading question intends to understand what type of female subjects the different policies implementing the resolution keep into focus and envision, on the continuum that goes from women as victims of war to be protected from violence to women as part the conflict and as bearer of fundamental rights (among which the right to security) which can be only enjoyed in a legal setting - with implication on the socio-economic level - in which no gender discrimination exist.