The geography of large-scale land acquisitions: Analysing socio-ecological patterns of target contexts in the global South

This paper analyses local geographical contexts targeted by transnational large-scale land acquisitions (>200 ha per deal) in order to understand how emerging patterns of socio-ecological characteristics can be related to processes of large-scale foreign investment in land. Using a sample of 139 lan...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Messerli, P, Giger, M, Dwyer, M.B., Breu, T., Eckert, S.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/94011
_version_ 1855535571981565952
author Messerli, P
Giger, M
Dwyer, M.B.
Breu, T.
Eckert, S.
author_browse Breu, T.
Dwyer, M.B.
Eckert, S.
Giger, M
Messerli, P
author_facet Messerli, P
Giger, M
Dwyer, M.B.
Breu, T.
Eckert, S.
author_sort Messerli, P
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper analyses local geographical contexts targeted by transnational large-scale land acquisitions (>200 ha per deal) in order to understand how emerging patterns of socio-ecological characteristics can be related to processes of large-scale foreign investment in land. Using a sample of 139 land deals georeferenced with high spatial accuracy, we first analyse their target contexts in terms of land cover, population density, accessibility, and indicators for agricultural potential. Three distinct patterns emerge from the analysis: densely populated and easily accessible croplands (35% of land deals); remote forestlands with lower population densities (34% of land deals); and moderately populated and moderately accessible shrub- or grasslands (26% of land deals). These patterns are consistent with processes described in the relevant case study literature, and they each involve distinct types of stakeholders and associated competition over land. We then repeat the often-cited analysis that postulates a link between land investments and target countries with abundant so-called “idle” or “marginal” lands as measured by yield gap and available suitable but uncultivated land; our methods differ from the earlier approach, however, in that we examine local context (10-km radius) rather than countries as a whole. The results show that earlier findings are disputable in terms of concepts, methods, and contents. Further, we reflect on methodologies for exploring linkages between socio-ecological patterns and land investment processes. Improving and enhancing large datasets of georeferenced land deals is an important next step; at the same time, careful choice of the spatial scale of analysis is crucial for ensuring compatibility between the spatial accuracy of land deal locations and the resolution of available geospatial data layers. Finally, we argue that new approaches and methods must be developed to empirically link socio-ecological patterns in target contexts to key determinants of land investment processes. This would help to improve the validity and the reach of our findings as an input for evidence-informed policy debates.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace94011
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
publishDateSort 2014
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace940112025-09-25T13:01:42Z The geography of large-scale land acquisitions: Analysing socio-ecological patterns of target contexts in the global South Messerli, P Giger, M Dwyer, M.B. Breu, T. Eckert, S. land use land use planning spatial analysis This paper analyses local geographical contexts targeted by transnational large-scale land acquisitions (>200 ha per deal) in order to understand how emerging patterns of socio-ecological characteristics can be related to processes of large-scale foreign investment in land. Using a sample of 139 land deals georeferenced with high spatial accuracy, we first analyse their target contexts in terms of land cover, population density, accessibility, and indicators for agricultural potential. Three distinct patterns emerge from the analysis: densely populated and easily accessible croplands (35% of land deals); remote forestlands with lower population densities (34% of land deals); and moderately populated and moderately accessible shrub- or grasslands (26% of land deals). These patterns are consistent with processes described in the relevant case study literature, and they each involve distinct types of stakeholders and associated competition over land. We then repeat the often-cited analysis that postulates a link between land investments and target countries with abundant so-called “idle” or “marginal” lands as measured by yield gap and available suitable but uncultivated land; our methods differ from the earlier approach, however, in that we examine local context (10-km radius) rather than countries as a whole. The results show that earlier findings are disputable in terms of concepts, methods, and contents. Further, we reflect on methodologies for exploring linkages between socio-ecological patterns and land investment processes. Improving and enhancing large datasets of georeferenced land deals is an important next step; at the same time, careful choice of the spatial scale of analysis is crucial for ensuring compatibility between the spatial accuracy of land deal locations and the resolution of available geospatial data layers. Finally, we argue that new approaches and methods must be developed to empirically link socio-ecological patterns in target contexts to key determinants of land investment processes. This would help to improve the validity and the reach of our findings as an input for evidence-informed policy debates. 2014-09 2018-07-03T10:56:48Z 2018-07-03T10:56:48Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/94011 en Open Access Elsevier Messerli, P., Giger, M., Dwyer, M. B., Breu, T., Eckert, S. . 2014. The geography of large-scale land acquisitions : Analysing socio-ecological patterns of target contexts in the global South. Applied Geography, 53 : 449-459. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2014.07.005
spellingShingle land use
land use planning
spatial analysis
Messerli, P
Giger, M
Dwyer, M.B.
Breu, T.
Eckert, S.
The geography of large-scale land acquisitions: Analysing socio-ecological patterns of target contexts in the global South
title The geography of large-scale land acquisitions: Analysing socio-ecological patterns of target contexts in the global South
title_full The geography of large-scale land acquisitions: Analysing socio-ecological patterns of target contexts in the global South
title_fullStr The geography of large-scale land acquisitions: Analysing socio-ecological patterns of target contexts in the global South
title_full_unstemmed The geography of large-scale land acquisitions: Analysing socio-ecological patterns of target contexts in the global South
title_short The geography of large-scale land acquisitions: Analysing socio-ecological patterns of target contexts in the global South
title_sort geography of large scale land acquisitions analysing socio ecological patterns of target contexts in the global south
topic land use
land use planning
spatial analysis
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/94011
work_keys_str_mv AT messerlip thegeographyoflargescalelandacquisitionsanalysingsocioecologicalpatternsoftargetcontextsintheglobalsouth
AT gigerm thegeographyoflargescalelandacquisitionsanalysingsocioecologicalpatternsoftargetcontextsintheglobalsouth
AT dwyermb thegeographyoflargescalelandacquisitionsanalysingsocioecologicalpatternsoftargetcontextsintheglobalsouth
AT breut thegeographyoflargescalelandacquisitionsanalysingsocioecologicalpatternsoftargetcontextsintheglobalsouth
AT eckerts thegeographyoflargescalelandacquisitionsanalysingsocioecologicalpatternsoftargetcontextsintheglobalsouth
AT messerlip geographyoflargescalelandacquisitionsanalysingsocioecologicalpatternsoftargetcontextsintheglobalsouth
AT gigerm geographyoflargescalelandacquisitionsanalysingsocioecologicalpatternsoftargetcontextsintheglobalsouth
AT dwyermb geographyoflargescalelandacquisitionsanalysingsocioecologicalpatternsoftargetcontextsintheglobalsouth
AT breut geographyoflargescalelandacquisitionsanalysingsocioecologicalpatternsoftargetcontextsintheglobalsouth
AT eckerts geographyoflargescalelandacquisitionsanalysingsocioecologicalpatternsoftargetcontextsintheglobalsouth