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From land grab to win-win. Seizing the opportunities of international investments in agriculture.

Dezembro, 2008
África subsariana

Foreign acquisitions of farm land in developing countries have become the focus of concern. Many observers consider them a new form of colonialism that threatens food security of the poor. However, investments could be good news if the objectives of land purchasers are reconciled with the investment needs of developing countries. The paper finds that land for agriculture in developing countries has become a target of international investments because of the following:

Rural land certification in Ethiopia: process, initial impact, and implications for other African countries

Janeiro, 2007
Etiópia
África subsariana

Although many African countries have adopted highly innovative and pro-poor land laws, lack of implementation hinders their potentially far-reaching impact on productivity, poverty reduction, and governance. To assess the effects of these pro-poor land laws and analyse whether the existing doubts are justified, this report draws on the experience of Ethiopia which, over a period of 2-3 years, registered the majority of rural lands in a rapid process at rather low cost.

Alliances for Religions and Conservations (ARC) “Faith Engagement in Climate Smart Agriculture and Sustainable Land Management in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda

Janeiro, 2015
Tanzania
Quênia
Uganda

This is a desk appraisal of the Alliances for Religions and Conservations (ARC) done for the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad) by the Department of International Environment and Development Studies, Noragric, at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU).

Land policy: its importance and emerging lessons from Southern Africa

Dezembro, 1999
Uganda
África subsariana

With examples from throughout Southern Africa, this paper examines the objectives, impetus, importance, principles and important elements of a land policythe policy development process and policy implementationthe relevance of a national land policy for Uganda and emerging lessons [author]Paper presented at the Uganda Land Alliance Workshop on Land Tenure and Land Use Policy, Kampala, Uganda

Land management in Ghana: building on tradition and modernity

Dezembro, 2000
Gana
África subsariana

An overlap in the regulation of access to land and resources between customary and state management systems is causing problems of contradiction and conflict. This report analyses the pros and cons of both systems and makes a series of recommendations.State administration of land is found to have worked against poorer elements in Ghana. Whilst the Lands Commission and other institutions have made some positive achievements there is no evidence of practical benefits for the majority. Compulsory acquisition has resulted in displacement, landlessness and social unrest.

Carrying capacity, rangeland degradation and livestock development for the communal rangelands of Botswana

Dezembro, 1992
Botswana
África subsariana

A useful debate is developing over carrying capacity and the degradation of communal rangelands in sub-Saharan Africa. With a few lonely exceptions, scientists and policy-makers have in the past claimed that degradation is universal and livestock productivity lowered because of overstocking on communal range. This position has been mainly dogmatic. More recent research has not supported dogmatists; hence the debate, which impinges on livestock development policy in Botswana.A new livestock development policy is being promoted by the Government of Botswana (Ministry of Agriculture 1991).

Lessons from the land reform movement in West Bengal, India

Dezembro, 2003
Índia
Ásia Meridional

The Indian state of West-Bengal saw two major turnarounds in its rural sector in the eighties. The growth rate of rice production jumped from 1.8 per cent during 1960-80 to 4.7 per cent during 1977-94, and rural poverty fell from 73 to 31 per cent between 1973 and 1999, greatly surpassing achievements of other Indian states.This coincided with the 1977 election of a coalition of left-wing parties, led by the Communist Party of India (Marxist) or CPM, which held uninterrupted power for the following 26 years.

Impact of land certification on sustainable land resource management in the Amhara Region, Ethiopia

Janeiro, 2014
Etiópia

In Ethiopia, 85% of the population is directly supported by the agricultural economy.  However, the productivity of that economy is being seriously eroded by unsustainable land management practices both in areas of food crops and in grazing lands (Berry, 2003).

This study investigates the impact of land certification on sustainable land resource management and long-term investments. It also assesses the impact of land certification on farmers’ perceptions and confidence in land ownership and land use rights in Eastern and Western Amhara Region, Ethiopia.

 

What drives the global land rush?

Dezembro, 2010
Qatar
Egito
Nigéria
Estados Unidos
Ucrânia
Quirguistão
Indonésia
Brasil
Reino Unido
Gana
Rússia
Moldávia
Etiópia
Bielorrússia
Moçambique
Laos
Turquemenistão
Filipinas
Líbia
Tajiquistão
Emirados Árabes Unidos
Usbequistão
Kuwait
Argentina
Cazaquistão
Sudão
Bahrein
Arménia
Arábia Saudita
Cambodja
Oceânia
Sudoeste Asiático
Europa
Ásia Oriental
Ásia Meridional
América Latina e Caribe
América do Norte
Norte de África

Recent increases in the level of agricultural commodity prices and the resulting demand for land has been accompanied by a rising interest in acquiring agricultural land by investors. This paper studies the determinants of foreign land acquisition for large-scale agriculture.

Ownership and control in Chinese rangeland management since Mao: The case of free riding in Ningxia

Dezembro, 1995
China
Ásia Oriental
Oceânia

With the introduction of rural reforms in the early 1980s, China broke with its
collectivist past and began the arduous transition from a centrally planned to a free
market economy. The People’s Communes – the institutional basis of
agriculture under Mao – were disbanded, and communal land was
redistributed to users through a family-based ‘Household Contract
Responsibility System’ (HCRS), which offered farmers more managerial