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Why does viewing a household as a single unit have serious downfalls for gender analysis' The unitary view overlooks the crucial fact that gender relations between family members play a large role in intra-household decisions about decision-making, time allocation, and expenditure. A collective model on the other hand allows household analysis to consider gender relations, with attention to women's and men's respective access to, control over, or ownership of resources. This research tests the unitary model in a farm household context, in relation to the amount of inherited land of husbands and wives. It finds that income pooling (joining of income into one pot) between male and female members of the same household is not the norm. Rather environmental factors, such as legal and customary systems of entitlements, and markets determine the distribution of resources between household members. Links were also observable between social institutions, women's land rights, married women's labour force participation and household relations.