Women’s property ownership and empowerment in Latin America
Does property ownership empower women? When women have greater access to and control over land, do they also have greater decision-making power? Are they less likely to suffer from intimate partner violence? If they own or co-own a home with their spouse, do they have greater autonomy and freedom of movement within the marriage? Building on theories of the impact of women’s land ownership, including empirical studies that contradict each other, I employ a cross-sectional analysis of the relationship between women’s ownership of housing and land and three indicators of empowerment: participation in household decision-making; experiences of intimate partner violence; and level of marital control. I hypothesize that when women own property such as land and housing, this ownership provides leverage at the household level, increasing their ability to participate in decision-making and to escape violence.