27 Aug 2025
Research: Land ownership is key to gender gap in death registration in Bangladesh
TAGS

A new study in Bangladesh reveals that women’s lack of land ownership is a major factor behind low female death registration rates. Conducted by James P Grant School of Public Health (JPGSPH), BRAC University; Johns Hopkins University; and Vital Strategies, the research shows only 32% of deaths registered in Rangpur Division (2023–2024) were female.

Families often skip registering women’s deaths unless tied to property or inheritance issues. Respondents cited reasons like “no land-related matters” or “no inheritance issues.” The study also highlights systemic barriers such as low awareness, bureaucratic complexity, and poor inter-agency coordination.

Experts urge reforms including gender-sensitive awareness campaigns, simplified registration processes, and linking death certificates to essential services to ensure women are not excluded from official records.

Click here to read full article.

 

More News

16 February 2023

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight February 2023) Each month, our community newsletter puts…

20 January 2023

Vital Strategies has provided technical support to review and revise chapters of the draft Prakas (…

20 January 2023

Empowering children and youth affected by migration to become powerful agents of change. …

20 January 2023

A multi-stakeholder group of approximately 30 participants from the Cabinet Division, Bangladesh…

20 January 2023

Poverty, human rights, and statelessness interrelate with one another to varying degrees.…

29 December 2022

The Pacific Community (SPC) in collaboration with Brisbane Accord Group (BAG) partners will be…

29 December 2022

A new World Bank project aims to strengthen population and civil registration and increase usage of…

29 December 2022

A multi-stakeholder group of approximately 20 participants from Fiji Bureau of Statistics, Ministry…

20 January 2023

The Philippine National CRVS Stakeholders’ Conference for the Development of Strategies in…

15 November 2022

This month, our community newsletter would like to highlight Ms. Olga Joos, a CRVS…