It is now widely recognised among policymakers and practitioners that women’s ownership of agricultural land is an important determinant of their economic and social status, physical security, and the wellbeing of their family informs this paper titled 'How many and which women own land in India? Inter-gender and intra-gender gaps' published in The Journal of Development Studies. Equal land rights for women is also a key target of Goal 5 on gender equality in the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
However, many countries such as India lack comprehensive country-wide estimates of the gender inequality in land ownership. Most studies focus on indicators such as percentage of women owning land or what percentage of landowners are female. However, there is a lack of studies that look at different aspects of inequality such as details of individual vs. joint ownership, and the proportion, area and quality of land owned.
Although women can acquire land by various means, such as inheritance, gift, purchase, or government transfers, inheritance is usually the most important mode in in South Asia via which women acquire agricultural land which is largely owned privately, as women are more financially constrained than men in their ability to purchase any.
All the post-Independence reforms have focused on strengthening women’s rights as daughters rather than their rights as widows or wives and on encouraging women to acquire land as daughters, especially as coparceners in joint family property. However very little information is available on whether this exists in reality.
This paper discusses the findings of a study that assesses the parameters of rural women’s land ownership across nine states, and changes in the same set of households over a five-year period, 2010–2014, for all the surveyed states, and over 2009–2014 for five states.
The study finds that:
The paper highlights the need for more data generation at the national and state level by introducing gender-disaggregation in the Agricultural Census and the National Sample Surveys, which do not gather land ownership data by gender, and by introducing a gender column when digitising land records.
It also recommends strengthening women’s property position as daughters at the policy level to move towards gender equality in landownership.