Policy Brief No. 41. Land grabbing in Africa and the new politics of food

Abstract

'Africa is for sale' is how some characterise it; there is a 'land grab' underway. Others are more cautious, speaking of 'large-scale land acquisitions', while the World Bank notes euphemistically the 'rising global interest in farmland'. Whatever the prevailing terminology and ideologies, there is now ample evidence that large swathes of African farmland are being allocated to investors, usually on long-term leases, at a rate not seen for decades, indeed, not since the colonial period. The fact that much of this land is being acquired to provide for the future food and fuel needs of foreign nations has, not surprisingly, led to allegations that a neo-colonial push by more wealthy and powerful nations is underway to annex the continent’s key natural resources.

Citation

Future Agricultures Policy Brief 041, June 2011, 8 pp.

Policy Brief No. 41. Land grabbing in Africa and the new politics of food

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2011