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Bibliothèque Africa's Land Rush: Rural Livelihoods and Agrarian Change

Africa's Land Rush: Rural Livelihoods and Agrarian Change

Africa's Land Rush: Rural Livelihoods and Agrarian Change

Resource information

Date of publication
Juin 2015
Resource Language
Pages
224
License of the resource

Africa has been at the centre of a "land grab" in recent years, with investors lured by projections of rising food prices, growing demand for "green" energy, and cheap land and water rights. But such land is often also used or claimed through custom by communities. What does this mean for Africa? In what ways are rural people's lives and livelihoods being transformed as a result? And who will control its land and agricultural futures? The case studies explore the processes through which land deals are being made; the implications for agrarian structure, rural livelihoods and food security; and the historical context of changing land uses, revealing that these land grabs may resonate with, even resurrect, forms of large-scale production associated with the colonial and early independence eras. The book depicts the striking diversity of deals and dealers: white Zimbabwean farmers in northern Nigeria, Dutch and American joint ventures in Ghana, an Indian agricultural company in Ethiopia's hinterland, European investors in Kenya's drylands and a Canadian biofuel company on its coast, South African sugar agribusiness in Tanzania's southern growth corridor, in Malawi's "Greenbelt" and in southern Mozambique, and white South African farmers venturing onto former state farms in the Congo.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Ruth Hall
Ian Scoones
Dzodzi Tsikata

Publisher(s)
Geographical focus