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Land Access, Productivity and Female Labour Force Participation

December, 2021

Access to land is critical for women’s economic empowerment and wellbeing. In developing countries, secure land rights for women improve household nutrition, children’s health, school enrolment, and increase women’s decision-making power. Studies from Pakistan, Nepal, Ethiopia, and Vietnam highlight these positive outcomes.

In India, despite legal reforms like the Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, only 13.8% of women own agricultural land-and often without real control. Social norms, weak implementation, and lack of gender-disaggregated data continue to restrict women’s land ownership and access to benefits tied to it.

Efforts such as joint land titling, gender-inclusive policies, legal awareness, and improved data systems are essential for closing the gap. Secure land rights are not just about ownership-they are a pathway to equality, better livelihoods, and stronger communities.

Resource Type IWWAGE-ISST-BRIEFS

Authors Ayushi Gupta