Cherchi, LudovicaGoldstein, MarkusHabyarimana, JamesMontalvao, JoaoO'Sullivan, MichaelUdry, ChrisGruver, Ariel2019-04-092019-04-092019-04https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31513Traditional customary land tenure systems often limit women’s land rights in Sub-Saharan Africa.In an ongoing experiment in rural Uganda, we offered households fully-subsidized land titles and basic information about the benefits of land titling.Providing additional gender information and making the offer conditional on female co-tilting raised the take up of joint titles to about 76 percent and 89 percent, respectively, without dampening overall demand for titling.CC BY 3.0 IGOLAND RIGHTSGENDERPROPERTY RIGHTSRURAL POVERTYLAND TITLEAFRICA GENDER POLICYGENDER INNOVATION LABWOMEN AND PROPERTY RIGHTSEmpowering Women Through Equal Land RightsBriefWorld BankExperimental Evidence From Rural Uganda10.1596/31513