Women’s Right to Property: An Enigmatic Cauldron of Growing Landlessness of Women across the Globe
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Type
Article
Date
2024-03
Journal Title
Indian Journal of Law and Justice
Journal Editor
Bandyopadhyay, Rathin
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of North Bengal
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Abstract
There is a rise in the participation of women in practically every economic area.
The number of women who are leading houses and participating in the world's
workforce formally is growing at an alarming rate. In spite of these tendencies,
the percentage of land that is legally owned by women is a much lower
percentage than that of males across the globe, and women are routinely denied
the opportunity to ownership. There are a number of social, cultural,
historical, political, and legal variables that contribute to the lack of property
and inheritance rights that women have, and the precise patterns of ownership
and disenfranchisement may vary greatly from place to place. If a woman does
not have a formal title to land or property, for example, it is very difficult for her
to acquire a loan or line of credit since she has no security to put up against the
debt. This further results in women’s lower status and higher rates of poverty
compared to men. This raises many inquiries such as
1. To what extent do women own property globally?
2. In what ways do societal and cultural norms prevent women from
gaining access to, controlling, and owning land?
3. What legal, social, and political obstacles prevent women from
acquiring, using, and/or reselling land? Therefore, the need of the hour is not just enacting strict laws and regulations
but also making sure that these laws and regulations are put into force properly
in order to increase women’s access to owning land. This article traces the
intellectual waves and political and social factors that formed the difficult
disputes over the basic right to property in India, the US, the UK, Islamic
countries like Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Iran, and several African countries and
further discusses the barriers faced by women across the globe to in order to
have access to the right to property and finally recommend a way forward.
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Accession No
Call No
Book Title
Edition
Volume
ISBN No
Volume Number
15
Issue Number
1
ISSN No
0976-3570
eISSN No
Pages
Pages
237 - 261