Engström, Linda
- Institutionen för stad och land, Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet
Forskningsartikel2018Vetenskapligt granskadÖppen tillgång
Bluwstein, Jevgeniy; Lund, Jens Friis; Askew, Kelly; Stein, Howard; Noe, Christine; Odgaard, Rie; Maganga, Faustin; Engstrom, Linda
Studies of accumulation by dispossession in the Global South tend to focus on individual sectors, for example, large-scale agriculture or nature conservation. Yet smallholder farmers and pastoralists are affected by multiple processes of land alienation. Drawing on the case of Tanzania, we illustrate the analytical purchase of a comprehensive examination of dynamics of land alienation across multiple sectors. To begin with, processes of land alienation through investments in agriculture, mining, conservation, and tourism dovetail with a growing social differentiation and class formation. These dynamics generate unequal patterns of land deprivation and accumulation that evolve in a context of continued land dependency for the vast majority of the rural population. Consequently, land alienation engenders responses by individuals and communities seeking to maintain control over their means of production. These responses include migration, land tenure formalization, and land transactions, that propagate across multiple localities and scales, interlocking with and further reinforcing the effects of land alienation. Various localized processes of primitive accumulation contribute to a scramble for land in the aggregate, providing justifications for policies that further drive land alienation.
accumulation by dispossession; agriculture; conservation; land grabbing; Tanzania
Journal of Agrarian Change
2018, Volym: 18, nummer: 4, sidor: 806-830 Utgivare: WILEY
SDG17 Genomförande och globalt partnerskap
Nationalekonomi
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/joac.12271
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/96687