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Field
Trial End Date
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Before
August 02, 2024
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After
August 02, 2027
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Field
Last Published
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Before
May 17, 2024 05:41 PM
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After
May 17, 2024 06:02 PM
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Field
Intervention (Public)
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Before
This study evaluates two interventions with the potential to strengthen women’s property rights.
Land reallocation: This intervention will consist of an information package in the form of a short video. The video will expose selected beneficiaries to tailored messages on the potential benefits of a wife’s land ownership. This intervention will take place during the land rights “clarification” phase occurring in each village as part of PAMOFOR. A field officer will schedule an in-person household visit with each randomly selected couple and ask the couple for their consent to show them a brief video on the tablet. The officer will communicate that the video is intended for the couple only, but will record anyone else’s presence during the viewing. After the viewing, the field officer will explain that s/he has come to propose that the husband give a part of his land, for a minimum of 0.5 ha, to his wife during the upcoming free land certification. If they accept, after their plots have been measured during the delimitation phase of PAMOFOR (which should happen within 4 months of the clarification phase), a certificate will be issued for that plot in the wife’s name alongside the certificates for the other (husband’s) plots.
Marriage upgrading: The “marriage upgrading” intervention will assist couples who are customarily married to enter into a civil marriage within the default ‘community of property’ regime. A field officer will administer a short educational video to both spouses in randomly selected households, explaining the legal implications and potential benefits of civil marriage under this regime. The field officer will then offer the couple the option to receive a fully-subsidized marriage license under the community of property regime. This offer will include: full coverage of the administrative costs for statutory marriage; assistance with the retrieval of necessary documentation (including a specially-issued birth certificate from their natal community); assistance with the completion and submission of necessary administrative paperwork; and a small wedding celebration with refreshments. Couples who accept will be given an appointed time to appear before the sous-prefét for the marriage, occurring approximately two months after the household visits.
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After
This study evaluates two interventions with the potential to strengthen women’s property rights.
Marriage upgrading: The primary intervention under study is “marriage upgrading”, which will assist couples who are customarily married to enter into a civil marriage within the default ‘community of property’ regime. A field officer will administer a short video to both spouses in randomly selected households, explaining the legal implications and potential benefits of civil marriage under this regime. The field officer will then offer the couple the option to receive a fully-subsidized marriage license under the community of property regime. This offer will include: full coverage of the administrative costs for statutory marriage; assistance with the retrieval of necessary documentation (including a specially-issued birth certificate from their natal community); assistance with the completion and submission of necessary administrative paperwork; and a small wedding celebration with refreshments. Couples who accept will be given an appointed time to appear before the sous-prefét for the marriage.
Land reallocation: This intervention will consist of an information package in the form of a short video. The video will expose selected beneficiaries to tailored messages on the potential benefits of a wife’s land ownership. This intervention will take place during the land rights “clarification” phase occurring in each village as part of PAMOFOR. A field officer will schedule an in-person household visit with each randomly selected couple and ask the couple for their consent to show them a brief video on the tablet. The officer will communicate that the video is intended for the couple only, but will record anyone else’s presence during the viewing. After the viewing, the field officer will explain that s/he has come to propose that the husband give a part of his land, ideally a minimum of 0.5 ha, to his wife during the upcoming free land certification. If they accept, after their plots have been measured during the delimitation phase of PAMOFOR, a certificate will be issued for that plot in the wife’s name alongside the certificates for the other (husband’s) plots.
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Field
Intervention Start Date
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Before
October 26, 2020
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After
October 23, 2020
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Field
Intervention End Date
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Before
February 02, 2021
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After
October 02, 2024
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Field
Primary Outcomes (End Points)
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Before
Shorter-term: perceived tenure security, decision-making over land use, crop choice and investment in land, time-use, labor supply, gender attitudes, relationship quality.
Longer-term: agricultural productivity and revenue, off-farm revenue, expenditures, credit access, bargaining power, political participation.
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After
Shorter-term: perceived tenure security, decision-making over land use, crop choice and investment in land, time-use, labor supply, relationship quality.
Longer-term: agricultural productivity and revenue, off-farm revenue, expenditures, bargaining power.
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Field
Primary Outcomes (Explanation)
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Before
Longer-term: agricultural productivity and revenue, off-farm revenue, expenditures, time-use, credit access, bargaining power.
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After
Longer-term: agricultural productivity and revenue, off-farm revenue, expenditures, time-use, bargaining power.
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Field
Experimental Design (Public)
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Before
We will draw a random sample of households based on the sample eligibility criteria (being a customarily married, landowning Ivorian-born couple). These households will be located in three of the PAMOFOR regions (Agneby-Tiassa, La Mé and N’Zi Comoé).
Within these villages, treatment will be randomized at the household-level. Assignment to the treatment and control groups will be performed using stratified within-village randomization, following a household census in each study village to screen for eligible households. The selection of households within each village will be further stratified by marital status (monogamous or polygamous) and duration of marriage (above or below the median). The research team will add matrilineal status as a stratification variable provided the “cell size”, to be validated at baseline, is sufficiently large.
We will run three main comparisons:
1. Land Reallocation vs. Control: This will yield the causal (intent-to-treat) impact of reallocating one plot of land to a woman within the household.
2. Marriage Upgrading vs. Control. This will give us the causal estimate of a woman entering into statutory marriage.
3. Marriage Upgrading vs. Land Reallocation: This will allow us to estimate which mechanism is more effective in increasing women’s bargaining power and wellbeing.
To test for the presence of within-village behavioral spillovers (e.g., wives in the control group increasing their decision-making over household resources by modelling their treatment neighbors’ behavior), we will also identify a set of “pure” control households residing in villages outside of the gender intervention zone.
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After
We will draw a random sample of households based on the sample eligibility criteria (being a customarily married, landowning Ivorian-born couple). These households will be located in three of the PAMOFOR regions (Agneby-Tiassa, La Mé and N’Zi Comoé).
Within these villages, treatment will be randomized at the household-level. Assignment to the treatment and control groups will be performed using stratified within-village randomization, following a household census in each study village to screen for eligible households. The selection of households within each village will be further stratified by marital status (monogamous or polygamous) and duration of marriage (above or below the median). The research team will add matrilineal status as a stratification variable provided the “cell size”, to be validated at baseline, is sufficiently large.
Our primary comparison will be between Marriage Upgrading and Control. This will give us the causal estimate of a woman entering into statutory marriage. We additionally plan to compare the impact of Marriage Upgrading to that of Land Reallocation (see attached pre-analysis plan for additional details).
To test for the presence of within-village behavioral spillovers (e.g., wives in the control group increasing their decision-making over household resources by modelling their treatment neighbors’ behavior), we will also identify a set of “pure” control households residing in villages outside of the gender intervention zone.
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Field
Planned Number of Observations
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Before
2,190 households
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After
Approximately 2,000 households
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Field
Sample size (or number of clusters) by treatment arms
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Before
680 households in land reallocation intervention;
680 in marriage upgrading intervention;
830 control households, 150 of which in villages where no gender intervention is taking place.
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After
622 households offered land reallocation intervention;
615 households offered marriage upgrading intervention;
830 control households, 150 of which in villages where no gender intervention is taking place.
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Field
Secondary Outcomes (End Points)
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Before
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After
gender attitudes, credit access, political participation.
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