Gender, property rights, and natural resources

TR Number

Date

1997

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier Science Ltd.

Abstract

Attention to gender differences in property rights can improve the outcomes of natural resource management policies and projects in terms of efficiency, environmental sustainability, equity, and empowerment of resource users. Although it is impossible to generalize across cultures and resources, it is important to identify the nature of rights to land, trees and water held by women and men, and how they are acquired and transmitted form one user to another. The paper particularly examines how the shift from customary tenure systems to private property-in land, trees, and water-has affected women, the effect of gender differences in property on collective action, and the implications for project design.

Description

Metadata only record

Keywords

Women, Land tenure, Water, Men, Gender, Sustainability, Natural resource management, Intellectual property rights, Collective action, Land resources, Intrahousehold, Trees, Ecosystem Governance

Citation

World Development 25(8): 1303-1315