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Tenants of agricultural land in Stavropol Krai, Russia. 

Tenants of agricultural land in Stavropol Krai, Russia. 

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The aim of this paper is to give an overview and analyze the contemporary land tenure relations in Russia in view of their influences on economic viability of agricultural production. The paper investigates progress made toward the development of agricultural land market in economies in transition. The research is made with emphasis on Stavropol Kr...

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... The imperfection of present land ownership systems severely hinders the sustainable development of the agricultural economy [44]. Addressing the current issues, Trukhachev et al. explored potential paths for sustainable agricultural economic development from the perspective of land ownership relations [45]. Yang et al., in the context of specific practices in banana production, also confirmed the relationship between land tenure systems and sustainable agricultural production [46]. ...
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Conducting agricultural land suitability assessments (ALSA) scientifically is crucial for ensuring food security and fostering sustainable agricultural development. This study assessed the suitability of agricultural land in Taiyuan using a geographic information system (GIS) and the analytic hierarchy process (AHP), integrating factors such as topography, soil, water sources, and social conditions at a 1 km spatial resolution. The primary aim was to map the spatial distribution of agricultural land suitability and understand county-level variations. Given the irreversible impact of urban development on land use and the critical importance of ecological conservation, corresponding subtractions for urban and natural protected areas have been applied in this study during the assessment of agricultural land suitability. The findings revealed that Taiyuan’s agricultural land suitability generally falls within an intermediate range, without areas classified as completely unsuitable (lowest rank) or suitable (highest rank). The agricultural land suitability does not reach the extreme conditions of being “unsuitable” (lowest rank) nor “suitable” (highest rank), reflecting an overall intermediate potential for agricultural production across the entirety of Taiyuan. The spatial distribution indicates higher suitability in the east and lower in the west, with 33.1% of Taiyuan’s territorial area deemed relatively suitable, 61.3% moderately suitable, and only 5.6% generally suitable for agricultural production. Recommendations include focusing on high-economic-return crops in suitable areas, adopting drought-resistant varieties and enhancing agricultural infrastructure in moderately suitable areas, and prioritizing ecological conservation in generally suitable areas. Additionally, county-level strategies suggest differentiated agricultural models: agritourism and boutique agriculture in urban conflict areas like Qingxu and Wanbailin; cultivation of cold-resistant crops in ecologically fragile areas like Loufan; and sustainable agricultural practices like planting drought-resistant crops in water-scarce regions like Yangqu. This comprehensive assessment offers valuable insights for optimizing agricultural land allocation in Taiyuan, balancing economic development with ecological sustainability.
... Economic Capital productivity [114][115][116][117] Cost [61,118,119] Credit availability [6] Diversification of activities [120,121] Diversification of income [122,123] Efficiency [40,119,124] External financing [40,125] External income [40,126,127] External inputs [40,[128][129][130] Farm's profitability [40,131] Farmer's risks [6] Food loss [6,[132][133][134] Income [40,61] Investment intensity [135][136][137] Labor productivity [116,138,139] Land productivity [140][141][142] Liquidity [143][144][145] Market access [6,[146][147][148] Marketability [40,61] Mineral fertilizers [40,149] Non-agriculture activities [40,150,151] Price [61,152,153] Production [40,[154][155][156] Profitability [157][158][159] Subsidies [40,160,161] Working capital level [40,162] Environment Agriculture practices [40,163,164] Biodiversity [165][166][167] Biological soil quality [40,168] Chemical soil quality [40,169] Climate change [6,170] Compaction measurements [40,171,172] Complex model [40,173] Crop protection intensity [98] Crop rotation [40,174,175] Culture reside management [40] Domestic biodiversity [40,176] Ecosystem [61,68,177] Emission of acidifying gasses [40] Emission of greenhouse gasses [40,[178][179][180] ...
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... Manatar, et al. (2017) states that the status of land tenure that is cultivated or processed in farming can be seen from the way the land is controlled by the owner farmer, the farmer farmer, and the owner farmer. Different land tenure statuses will theoretically determine the level of diversity in farming, which in this case includes different levels of land productivity, income and expenditure (Trukhachev, et al., 2014). Differences in land tenure status will determine farmers' access to capital. ...
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... People's economy and community participation in terms of distribution of agricultural products. Agricultural development is expected to maintain community economic sustainability and food stability (Trukhachev et al., 2015). ...
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As one of the regions in the Riau Archipelago Province, Lingga Regency has its potential in the agricultural sector, supporting local food needs to distribute the surrounding area. So far, food needs in Lingga are supplied from Jambi Province or other regions, so that the dependence on food from other regions is very high. So, if the weather changes every year, the supply of food needs will decrease, and prices will be higher. The solution, the production of subsistence farmers, can be used as an alternative to meet food needs. Therefore, local governments encourage subsistence agricultural productivity so that production results are utilized by providing subsidies for agricultural production facilities, supporting farming capital, strengthening farmer institutions, and providing rural transportation. Meanwhile, technology cannot increase productivity, considering that subsistence farmers still use traditional culture, so local farmers cannot use that modern agricultural technology. This study aims to determine how local governments encourage the productivity of subsistence farmers as suppliers of regional food needs. Then this research is qualitative with a study approach that examines the government's efforts to encourage subsistence agricultural production.
... In Tunisia, there are several land tenure statuses, as follow: 1) private properties known as family inheritance and 2) properties owned by rental contract with the state over a long period of time known as Farming Enhancement Corporation (FEC) (Akram et al., 2019). The organizational and economic mechanism of land ownership and land tenure is an integrity between land relations management system and economic influence methods of this system (Trukhachev et al., 2015). ...
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In Tunisia the main objective of sustainable agriculture is to improve agricultural systems by creating more wealth and meeting the needs of the population without compromising those of future generations. It turned out that confusion and lack of clarity of ownership status of agricultural land would lead to instability in agricultural sustainability by having a negative impact on social and economic prosperity and environment preservation. Within this environmental concern, the current research constitutes an assessment of the level of sustainability of different farms in Tunisia where problems of land ownership still exist. The current research is based on the Farm Sustainability Indicators method (standing for: ‘Indicateurs de durabilité des exploitations agricoles or IDEA). This case study employed IDEA method which provides operational content to compare the sustainability concept at the farm level, based on the factor of ‘land tenure status’. In Tunisia, the lack of clear land ownership affects the output of agriculture that is why it is valuable to assess the impact of land properties status on farms’ agricultural sustainability. Hence, we distinguished two groups of farms: Private Farms (PF) (inherited from father to son) and Farming Enhancement Corporation (FEC) (state’s lands leased by farmers for many years). The results showed that land tenure has impact on farms sustainability. PF are more sustainable on both agro-ecological scale (49.2) and socio-territorial scale (48); compared to FEC (agro-ecological: 44.5 and socio-territorial: 46). PF favor integrated systems and the production of field crops and fodder crops and they attach greater importance to their employees’ training.
... Consequently, the country engaged the EU and UNDP to fund the process of establishing CORS in the country. Initially, five GNSS CORS will be established primarily focusing on expediting the process of boundary mapping of farms to support security of tenure thus ensuring food security (Trukhachev, Ivolga and Lescheva, 2015) in line with the Sustainable Development Goals (Griggs et al., 2013;UN, 2016). Having realized the urgent need for establishing CORS in Zimbabwe, the readiness of the stakeholders and institutions which use geospatial data is yet to be evaluated. ...
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... However, the domination of shared and joint land ownership has weakened the role of the state in controlling land use [21] and has increased the fragmentation of public land property into many scattered units [22]. Almost twelve million land shares (certificates) were distributed between rural individuals and former employees of collective and state farms [23]. According to Trukhachev et al. [23], Lerman and Shagaida [20], Rozhkov [24], and Visser et al. [25], land reform in Russia has significantly contributed to structural variations in the composition of land funds. ...
... Almost twelve million land shares (certificates) were distributed between rural individuals and former employees of collective and state farms [23]. According to Trukhachev et al. [23], Lerman and Shagaida [20], Rozhkov [24], and Visser et al. [25], land reform in Russia has significantly contributed to structural variations in the composition of land funds. The proportion of agricultural land in the total land fund has been declining due to a loss of arable land, particularly in the vast areas of the Far Eastern Federal District and the Siberian Federal District [26]. ...
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In recent decades, Russia has experienced substantial transformations in agricultural land tenure. Post-Soviet reforms have shaped land distribution patterns but the impacts of these on agricultural use of land remain under-investigated. On a regional scale, there is still a knowledge gap in terms of knowing to what extent the variations in the compositions of agricultural land funds may be explained by changes in the acreage of other land categories. Using a case analysis of 82 of Russia’s territories from 2010 to 2018, the authors attempted to study the structural variations by picturing the compositions of regional land funds and mapping agricultural land distributions based on ranking “land activity”. Correlation analysis of centered log-ratio transformed compositional data revealed that in agriculture-oriented regions, the proportion of cropland was depressed by agriculture-to-urban and agriculture-to-industry land loss. In urbanized territories, the compositions of agricultural land funds were predominantly affected by changes in the acreage of industrial, transportation, and communication lands. In underpopulated territories in the north and far east of Russia, the acreages of cropland and perennial planting were strongly correlated with those of disturbed and barren lands. As the first attempt at such analysis in Russia, the conversion of cadastral classification data into land-rating values enabled the identification of region-to-region mismatches between the cadaster-based mapping and ranking-based distribution of agricultural lands.
... Also, the study reported positive a significant relationship between farm size and Crop cultivation in Bangladesh, Peru, and Thailand. Trukhachev, Ivolga and Lescheva [31] established a positive relationship between land and Crop cultivation in Russian land reforms in the 1990s. They further argued that diversification of forms of property is to established conditions for multi-functional farming and sustainable condition of rural development. ...
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Introduction. Literature was extensively reviewed in crop cultivation and other related fields for a better understanding of past, present and future needs in the study area. Although their relationships have generated considerable both farmers as well as public and scholarly interest. Agriculture is essential to economic growth in Nigeria and it is a major source of employment and poverty reduction as well as contributing significantly towards the gross domestic products. Purpose. The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationships between bank loan supply, land size, technology, cost-plus and crop cultivation in Nigeria. Based on a theoretical consideration this study was proposed to examine these relationships to improve cultivation. Method. A cross-sectional survey design was adopted and the unit of analysis was the individual farmer in Nigeria. The study employed a systematic random sampling technique in data collection, with a sample size of 764 farmers. Partial Least Squares (PLS) algorithm and bootstrap techniques were used to test the stated hypotheses. Result and Recommendation. The findings of this study are that bank loan supply, technology, cost-pus have a direct and significant positive relationship with Crop cultivation, while, land size is not a predictor of Crop cultivation in Nigeria. Finally, the study's implications for theory and practice, conclusions as well as direction for future research were provided and discussed.