Large Scale Foreign Land Acquisitions: Neoliberal Opportunities or Neocolonial Challenges?
Abstract
Over the last decade, a dramatic rise in commercial agricultural investment has taken place
the world over at a rate much higher than previous times. Some of the causes that spurred this
whole business happen to be mainly the food security concerns of food poor countries as in
the case of the Gulf states, a shift of focus by western based investment banks, hedge funds
and sovereign wealth funds towards less volatile assets such as land in the aftermath of the
2007/08 global financial crises, drought induced food export restrictions by major food
exporting countries such as India and Russia, only to mention some of them. Huge private
companies, government sponsored firms and even highly reputed US universities such as
Harvard and Vanderbilt, among others, then took an aggressive move in acquiring large tracts
of land across Africa, Latin America, Asia and to some degree in Europe, and massively
invested on them. Latest reports indicate that an amount of land well over 80 million hectares
have been put up to the global market, much of which has already been effectively leased by
investors. Even though this practice of large scale foreign land acquisitions is fairly a matter
of global reach, a staggering 75 percent of this whole business has so far taken place in Africa
alone. This simply made the continent a spotlight case and lured attention into questioning as
to how these investments are taking place and what sort of ramifications may be born out in
result.
Departing from neoliberal and neocolonial discourses from whose perspective the recent
expansion of the practice has been analyzed, this thesis has made an attempt to analyze how
the stake of Africa in the growing practice of large scale land acquisitions can be looked up
on and explained. Seeking to narrow down focus and do a practical analysis, three sub-
Saharan African countries that are actively engaged on leasing of land to foreign investors-
Ethiopia, Tanzania and Uganda- have been selected as case studies. The entire analysis of
these cases is centered on answering whether the practice leads to the social development of
local populations as often claimed by proponents or if it rather leads to the detriment and
impoverishment of host populations. It is observed throughout this research that to draw sheer
conclusions in black and white is not an easy matter. However, the thesis argues that the
number of social and environmental challenges that have been taken account of as a result of
the ongoing acquisition of large tracts of land in poor countries necessitates a serious political
responsibility and accountability which is currently lacking should the business amount to any
win win benefits.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2012-06-20Author
Adbib, Readeat
Keywords
Large-scale Foreign Land Acquisitions, Neoliberalism, Neocolonialism, Win win benefits, Food Security, Land, China, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Uganda
Series/Report no.
Global Studies
2012:6
Language
eng