Landlessness
Landlessness is the quality or state of being without land, without access to land, or without having private ownership of land. Although overlapping considerably, landlessness is not a necessary condition of poverty. In modern capitalist societies, individuals may not necessarily privately own land yet still possess the capital to obtain an excess of what is necessary to sustain themselves, such as wealthy individuals who rent expensive high-rise apartments in major urban centers. As such, landlessness may not exist as an immediate threat to their survival or quality of life. This minority of landless individuals as sometimes been referred to as the "landless rich." However, for the majority of landless people, including the urban poor and those displaced into conditions of rural-to-urban migration, their condition of landlessness is also one of impoverishment, being without the capital to meet their basic necessities nor the land to grow their own food, keep animals, or sustain themselves. During times of economic prosperity in modern capitalist societies, the liabilities of landlessness may not be noticeable, especially to the wealthy, but during times of economic failure and rising unemployment, the liabilities of landlessness become more visible.
Indigenous landlessness
Landlessness has since been identified as "one of the main causes of poverty amongst Indigenous peoples, particularly Indigenous women, making land rights critical to the alleviation of Indigenous poverty." Indigenous people throughout the world have been displaced from their traditional lands as a result of settler colonialism, corporate imperialism, war, logging and mining, and even land conservation efforts, which has increased their social marginalization, lack of access to basic social services, and chronic poverty. According to colonial logics, Indigenous people were not able to exercise their territorial sovereignty. Indigenous peoples in the United States without a territory or a reservation, such as the Oklahoma Choctaws and the Winnemem Wintu, are nations without a land base, which affects their ability to assert sovereignty and self-determination while also leading directly to the loss of language, culture, and traditions. Māori in New Zealand have recognized how Indigenous homelessness is inextricably connected with landlessness as a result of the colonial acquisition of Indigenous resources to support European settlement.Landlessness in rural economies
Characteristics of landlessness in rural economies
Landlessness can be defined as the lack of access to or absence of adequate land to provide basic needs and fulfillment of human rights. A rural household is generally categorized as landless if it does not have land outside of residential or rented land. Landlessness is usually also a manifestation of other societal problems such as poverty, insecurity, powerlessness, and inequality.In agrarian economies, land is the primary source of income and employment for rural populations. As such, ownership of and access to land is a major determinant of "economic solvency, social power structure, and hierarchy" and it is considered to be the most important contributor to poverty for rural households. The rural landless are separated from means of production and become dependent on non-agricultural sources of labor which are often inconsistent and offer insufficiently low wages. As a result, they continue to be unable to access adequate land due to the lack of social and fiscal power and are confined to the poorest segments of society.