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Does Commons Grabbing Lead to Resilience Grabbing?

Does Commons Grabbing Lead to Resilience Grabbing?

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This Special Issue contributes to the debate on land grabbing as commons grabbing with a special focus on how the development of state institutions (formal laws and regulations for agrarian development and compensations) and voluntary corporate social responsibility (CRS) initiatives have enabled the grabbing process. It also looks at how these institutions and CSR programs are used as development strategies of states and companies to legitimate their investments. This Special Issue includes case studies from Kenya, Morocco, Tanzania, Cambodia, Bolivia and Ecuador analysing how these strategies are embedded into neo-liberal ideologies of economic development. We propose looking at James Ferguson’s notion of the Anti-Politics Machine (1990) that served to uncover the hidden political basis of state-driven development strategies. We think it is of interest to test the approach for analysing development discourses and CSR-policies in agrarian investments. We argue based on a New Institutional Political Ecology (NIPE) approach that these legitimize the institutional change from common to state and private property of land and land related common pool resources which is the basis of commons grabbing that also grabbed the capacity for resilience of local people.

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Keywords

  • Actors
  • agro-industrial food system
  • agroecosystems and agroecosystem service
  • anthropology
  • co-management concept
  • commercialization of herding
  • common pool resources
  • Common Pool Resources (CPRs)
  • common property
  • common-pool resources
  • Commons
  • commons grabbing
  • communal land titling
  • Community Land Act and customary law
  • conservationism
  • Corporate social responsibility
  • Decentralization
  • development policy
  • Ecuador
  • export horticulture
  • food systems
  • forest land governance
  • formal and informal rules and regulations
  • gender
  • green energy
  • holistic management
  • Humanities
  • Identity
  • institution shopping
  • institutional change
  • Institutions
  • Laikipia County
  • Land
  • land concessions
  • Land grabbing
  • land tenure transformations
  • large scale land acquisitions
  • large-scale land acquisitions
  • Mau Forest
  • n/a
  • Ogiek
  • pastoral resilience
  • protected areas
  • Qualitative
  • resilience
  • resilience and commons grabbing
  • resilience, social anthropology
  • Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography
  • Social anthropology
  • Social interaction
  • Social issues & processes
  • Society & culture: general
  • Society & Social Sciences
  • Sociology & anthropology
  • Southeast Asia
  • Sustainable Energy
  • Water
  • water-shed management plan

Links

DOI: 10.3390/books978-3-03943-840-2

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