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Articles

Agricultural Land Use Change and its Drivers in the Palestinian Landscape Under Political Instability, the Case of Tulkarm City

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ABSTRACT

Agricultural land-use change is unavoidable with population growth and economic development. This study investigated the causes and the consequences of agricultural land-use change in Tulkarm city in the West Bank of Palestine after the construction of the Separation Wall. With the aid of GIS data, the study found that urban and built-up areas increased by 54% during the period 1999–2009. About 80% of the new urbanization occurred on agricultural land. Further, the study presented views of the urban planners, decision makers and farmers in Tulkarm regarding the main factors affecting agricultural land-use change in the city using qualitative interviews. The study found that the political factors, especially the existence of the Wall and the division of land into areas A, B and C, have had a major impact on the city’s uncontrolled development and the diffusion of urban areas on the landscape around the city. At the same time, unprofessional planning, lack of experience, and lack of communication and coordination between different planning organizations are considered major factors leading to uncontrolled and unorganized expansion of the city. Other factors such as farmers’ socio-economic status, land fragmentation, and population growth play essential roles in selling-off agricultural land for urban uses. Studying the dynamics of agricultural land-use change and the factors that led to this change in the West Bank in general, and in Tulkarm in particular, might help shape more robust theoretical understandings of how factors of land change interact under different circumstances, including protracted conflicts.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Faculty for the Future Award, Schlumberger Foundation, and the Choquette Family Foundation Global Experience Scholarship, University of Calgary.

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