Alienation of Land means a procedure where the owner of the land voluntarily gives/sells the property title to any other party. Whenever such property is taken as alienable, it basically means that it can be transferred/sold to another individual/party without any limitations.
Alienation of land indicates the disposal of land rights or the sale of land. It also means dispossession in a manner of speaking, of the land owned by any person or a community, after the ownership change/transfer. This is also the denial of any access to land within the Gram Sabha/equivalent authority’s jurisdiction at times.
Alienation of any such property may be called the property transfer via any mortgage, will, or a gift. The ownership will remain incomplete without the right of the owner to alienate any property in question. The concept has immense traction in the real estate sector, since property laws state that alienations are voluntary actions of property owners with regard to disposing off properties. The alienability of any property is its capacity to be transferred/sold across parties. Most properties have alienable attributes, although some are subject to specific limits on alienation as well.