Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1999

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Abstract

Gendered social norms and institutions are important determinants of agricultural activities in southwestern Burkina Faso. This paper argues that gendered land tenure, in particular, has effects on equity and efficiency. The usual view of women as holders of secondary, or indirect, rights to land must be supplemented by a more nuanced understanding of tenure. Women's rights are in fact considerably more complex than the simple right to fields from their husbands. First, women's rights to property obtained from men may be coupled with other rights and obligations. In many ethnic groups, women have share rights to the harvest of their husbands. Second, despite land scarcity and rises in land value certain types of rights are strengthening. Specifically, women are more and more able to obtain land through the market. Finally, government intervention in the gendering of tenure seems to have eroded women's individual rights to land even when government projects explicitly try to incorporate women as "partners" in land-use programs.

Comments

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Feminist Economics in 1999, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/135457099337789.

Reprinted in Gender and Development edited by Janet Momsen, Routledge, 2008, as Ch 39, in Vol.III pp. 82-107.

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