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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Land-based investments for rural development? A grounded analysis of the local impacts of biofuel feedstock plantations in Ghana.

George C. Schoneveld, +2 more
- 02 Nov 2011 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 4
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TLDR
In this article, the impacts and impact of biofuel feedstock development in Ghana were analyzed and it was found that companies are accessing large contiguous areas of customary land through opaque negotiations with traditional authorities, often outside the purview of government and customary land users.
Abstract
The rapidly growing biofuel sector in Africa has, in recent years, been received with divided interest. As part of a contemporary wave of agricultural modernization efforts, it could make invaluable contributions to rural poverty. Conversely, it could also engender socioeconomically and environmentally detrimental land use changes as valuable land resources are converted to plantation agriculture. This research analyzes the impacts and impact pathways of biofuel feedstock development in Ghana. It finds that companies are accessing large contiguous areas of customary land through opaque negotiations with traditional authorities, often outside the purview of government and customary land users. Despite lack of participation, most customary land users were highly supportive of plantation development, with high expectations of ‘development' and ‘modernization.' With little opposition and resistance, large areas of agricultural and forested land are at threat of being converted to plantation monoculture. A case study analysis shows that this can significantly exacerbate rural poverty as communities lose access to vital livelihood resources. Vulnerable groups, such as women and migrants, are found to be most profoundly affected because of their relative inability in recovering lost livelihood resources. Findings suggest that greater circumspection by government is warranted on these types of large-scale land deals.

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Methodological reflections on ‘land grab’databases and the ‘land grab’literature ‘rush’

TL;DR: The need for methodological rigour is not a luxury, but rather politically and tactically crucial from the point of view of "land grab" research as discussed by the authors, emphasizing the need for greater "reflexivity" in current 'land grab' research.
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Contemporary processes of large-scale land acquisition in sub-Saharan Africa: legal deficiency or elite capture of the rule of law?

TL;DR: This paper explored the relationship between policy and practice associated with customary rights protections in the context of large-scale land acquisitions through a document review and case study analyses from Ghana, Mozambique, Tanzania, and Zambia.
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The geographic and sectoral patterns of large-scale farmland investments in sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed 563 farmland projects that have been established between 2005 and 2013 in sub-Saharan Africa and highlighted a number of popular misconceptions regarding investor origin and their sectoral interests and motives.

Sustainable livelihoods in the global land rush? Archetypes of livelihood vulnerability and sustainability potentials. Keynote presentation.

TL;DR: In this paper, a meta-analysis of case studies and applies the archetypes approach developed in global change research to analyse the configurations of factors and processes that generate different livelihood outcomes in LSLA situations.
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Testing Claims about Large Land Deals in Africa: Findings from a Multi-Country Study

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present new evidence on the scale, geography, drivers and features of land deals, and relate findings to data from earlier research and international efforts to monitor land deals.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Tropical forests were the primary sources of new agricultural land in the 1980s and 1990s

TL;DR: This study analyzes the rich, pan-tropical database of classified Landsat scenes created by the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations to examine pathways of agricultural expansion across the major tropical forest regions in the 1980s and 1990s and highlights the future land conversions that probably will be needed to meet mounting demand for agricultural products.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using Evidence of Household Income Diversification to Inform Study of the Rural Nonfarm Labor Market in Africa

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of evidence provides some surprising departures from traditional images of non-farm activities of rural households, and the most worrying finding was the poor distribution of nonfarm earnings in rural areas, despite the importance of these earnings to food security and farm investments.
Posted Content

"Land grabbing" by foreign investors in developing countries: Risks and opportunities

J. von Braun, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2009 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the impacts of land acquisition on local people, who risk losing access to and control over the land on which they depend and the environment within which these land deals take place.
Book

World Agriculture and the Environment: A Commodity-by-Commodity Guide to Impacts and Practices

Jason W. Clay
TL;DR: Clay as mentioned in this paper presents an assessment of agricultural commodity production and the environmental problems it causes, along with prescriptions for increasing efficiency and reducing damage to natural systems, drawing on his extensive travel and research in agricultural regions around the world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Securing land and property rights in sub-Saharan Africa: The role of local institutions

TL;DR: For the vast majority of people, cheaper, simpler, locally grounded systems of rights registration can better meet their needs for secure tenure, and these locally grounded registration systems can also provide the foundation for more formal registration systems, as needs and government capacities develop as mentioned in this paper.
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