January 2009
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196 Reads
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372 Citations
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January 2009
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196 Reads
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372 Citations
January 2009
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1,134 Reads
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1,172 Citations
"Large-scale acquisitions of farmland in Africa, Latin America, Central Asia and Southeast Asia are making headlines in a flurry of media reports across the world. Lands that only a short time ago seemed of little outside interest are now being sought by international investors by the tune of hundreds of thousands of hectares. And while a failed attempt to lease 1.3 million hectares in Madagascar has attracted much media attention, deals reported in the international press constitute the tip of the iceberg. Despite the spate of media reports and rare published research, international land deals and their impacts still remain little understood. This report is a step towards filling this gap. The outcome of a collaboration between IIED, FAO and IFAD, the report discusses key trends and drivers in land acquisitions, the contractual arrangements underpinning them and the way these are negotiated, and the early impacts on land access for rural people in recipient countries. While international land deals are emerging as a global phenomenon, this report focuses on sub-Saharan Africa. The report draws on a literature review, on qualitative interviews with key informants internationally, on national inventories of ongoing and proposed land acquisitions since 2004 in five African countries (Ethiopia, Ghana, Madagascar, Mali and Sudan) and qualitative studies in Mozambique and Tanzania, and on legal analysis of national law and of a small sample of investor-state contracts."
... However, the present rate of acquisition has varied from the past. For instance, between 2004 and early 2009, about 452,000 ha of land deals have been approved in Ghana [45]. This seems to have reduced recently as the total size of approved deals is reported to be 403,907 ha and the aggregate size under contract is below 400,000 ha by 2020 [21]. ...
January 2009
... Answering this question has attracted a balanced debate in the literature. On the one hand, studies show that LSAIs provide an opportunity to eliminate poverty in the target countries by increasing (i) agricultural productivity through spillovers in terms of access to better technologies, access to input markets, and resilience to shocks (Ali et al., 2019); (ii) employment opportunities to the rural poor and lowering local prices and improving the access to food at a local level (Baumgartner et al., 2015;Cotula et al., 2014;Deininger & Byerlee, 2011), and (iii) increasing revenue and modernize the agriculture sector (Cotula, 2009). On the other hand, studies also indicate that LSAIs result in adverse impacts to the welfare and livelihoods of local communities in three ways. ...
January 2009