SIANI
Land Grabbing in Africa: global resource scarcity and competition for survival
Hosted by: Devnet, Uppsala University, SLU
The event will start on: 21 Oct 11 09:00
At Geocentrum, Uppsala University
Viillavägen 16, Uppsala ,
http://www.csduppsala.uu.se/devnet-web/
To secure future access to food and biofuels, private and state actors in wealthy countries (including the oil states) are increasingly buying or leasing farmland in the Global South, primarily in Sub-Saharan Africa. Some argue that this is recreating old colonial patterns of land ownership and distribution of power, threatening livelihoods of the rural poor. Others hold that such agricultural investments provide much needed means for economic development. In this one-day workshop, we will explore the phenomenon of land grabbing from theoretical and practical perspectives, and invite all interested to a constructive and lively discussion. Detailed program will be posted in September.
Presentations:
Register to [email protected] by October 15.
Land Grabbing in Africa: global resource scarcity and competition for survival
Hosted by: Devnet, Uppsala University, SLU
The event will start on: 21 Oct 11 09:00
At Geocentrum, Uppsala University
Viillavägen 16, Uppsala ,
http://www.csduppsala.uu.se/devnet-web/
To secure future access to food and biofuels, private and state actors in wealthy countries (including the oil states) are increasingly buying or leasing farmland in the Global South, primarily in Sub-Saharan Africa. Some argue that this is recreating old colonial patterns of land ownership and distribution of power, threatening livelihoods of the rural poor. Others hold that such agricultural investments provide much needed means for economic development. In this one-day workshop, we will explore the phenomenon of land grabbing from theoretical and practical perspectives, and invite all interested to a constructive and lively discussion. Detailed program will be posted in September.
Presentations:
- Philip McMichael, Cornell University, A food regime analysis of the land grab
- Kenneth Hermele, Lund University, Land grabbing in relation to energy, climate and the current resource crises
- Patrick Bond, University of KwaZulu Natal, Land grabbing in practice, experiences from Africa
- Atakilte Beyene, Stockholm Environment Institute, Land rights and corporate social responsibility
- Henning Melber, Dag Hammarskjöld Foundation, Concluding observations
Register to [email protected] by October 15.