1,357
Views
8
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

The drama of the grabbed commons: anti-politics machine and local responses

ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon

References

  • Adams, T., J.-D. Gerber, and M. Amacker. 2019. “Constraints and Opportunities in Gender Relations: Sugarcane Outgrower Schemes in Malawi.” World Development 122: 282–294.
  • Adams, T., J.-D. Gerber, M. Amacker, and T. Haller. 2018. “Who Gains from Contract Farming? Dependencies, Power Relations, and Institutional Change” The Journal of Peasant Studies 46 (7): 1435–1457.
  • Alden Wily, L. 2011. “The Law is to Blame.” Development and Change 42 (3): 357–379.
  • Alden Wily, L. 2012. “Looking Back to See Forward: the Legal Niceties of Land Theft in Land Rushes.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 39 (3–4): 751–775.
  • Amanor, K. S. 2009. “Global Food Chains, African Smallholders and World Bank Governance.” Journal of Agrarian Change 9 (2): 247–262.
  • Blaikie, P., and H. Brookfield. 1989. Land Degradation and Society. London: Methuen.
  • Borras Jr., S. M., and J. Franco. 2013. “Global Land Grabbing and Political Reactions ‘From Below’.” Third World Quarterly 34 (9): 1723–1747.
  • Borras Jr., S. M., R. Hall, I. Scoones, B. White, and W. Wolford. 2011. “Towards a Better Understanding of Global Land Grabbing: An Editorial Introduction.” Journal of Peasant Studies 38 (2): 209–216.
  • Bottazzi, P., A. Goguen, and S. Rist. 2016. “Conflicts of Customary Land Tenure in Rural Africa: Is Large-Scale Land Acquisition a Driver of ‘Institutional Innovation’?” The Journal of Peasant Studies 43 (5): 971–988.
  • Bromley, D. 1992. “The Commons, Common Property and Environmental Policy.” Environmental and Resource Economics 2: 1–17.
  • Business dictionary n.d. “Corporate Social Responsiblity.” www.businessdictionary.com/definition/corporate-social-responsibility.html (last accessed 1 January 2020).
  • Chinsinga, B. 2017. “The Green Belt Initiative, Politics and Sugar Production in Malawi.” Journal of Southern African Studies 43 (3): 501–515.
  • Chu, J. 2011. “Gender and ‘Land Grabbing’ in Sub-Saharan Africa.” Development 54 (1): 35–39.
  • Cotula, L. 2012. “The International Political Economy of the Global Land Rush.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 39 (3–4): 649–680.
  • Cotula, L. 2013. The Great African Land Grab? London: Zed Books.
  • Daly, H., and J. Cobb Jr. 1989. For the Common Good: Redirecting the Economy Toward Community, the Environment, and a Sustainable Future. Boston: Beacon Press.
  • Davis, K. 1960. “Can Business Afford to Ignore Social Responsibilities?” California Management Review 2: 70–76.
  • de Schutter, O. 2011. “How not to Think of Land-Grabbing: Three Critiques of Large-Scale Investments in Farmland.” Journal of Peasant Studies 38 (2): 249–279.
  • Deininger, K. 2011. “Challenges Posed by the New Wave of Farmland Investment.” Journal of Peasant Studies 38 (2): 217–247.
  • Dell’Angelo, J., P. D’Odorico, M. C. Rulli, and P. Marchand. 2017. “The Tragedy of the Grabbed Commons: Coercion and Dispossession in the Global Land Rush.” World Development 92: 1–12.
  • Djelic, M., and K. Sahlin-Andersson, eds. 2006. Transnational Governance: Institutional Dynamics of Regulation. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • Dolan, C., and D. Rajak. 2016. “Toward the Anthropology of Corporate Social Responsibility.” In The Anthropology of Corporate Social Responsibility, edited by C. Dolan, and D. Rajak, 1–28. New York/Oxford: Berghahn.
  • Eabrasu, M. 2012. “A Moral Pluralist Perspective on Corporate Social Responsibility.” Journal of Business Ethics 110 (4): 429–439.
  • Edelman, M., C. Oya, and S. M. Borras Jr. 2013. “Global Land Grabs: Historical Processes, Theoretical and Methodological Implications and Current Trajectories.” Third World Quarterly 34 (9): 1517–1531.
  • Elmhirst, R., M. Siscawati, B. S. Basnett, and D. Ekowati. 2017. “Gender and Generation in Engagements with Oil Palm in East Kalimantan, Indonesia: Insights from Feminist Political Ecology.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 44: 1135–1157.
  • Ensminger, J. 1992. Making a Market. Cambridge: CUP.
  • Fabinyi, M., L. Evans, and S. J. Foale. 2014. “Social-Ecological Systems, Social Diversity, and Power: Insights from Anthropology and Political Ecology.” Ecology and Society 19 (4): 28.
  • Fairhead, J., M. Leach, and I. Scoones. 2012. “Green Grabbing: A New Appropriation of Nature?” Journal of Peasant Studies 39 (2): 237–261.
  • Federici, S. 2004. Caliban and the Witch. Brooklyn: Autonomedia.
  • Ferguson, J. 1994. The Anti-Politics Machine. Development and Bureacuratic Power in Lesotho. Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Ferguson, J. 2006. Global Shadows: Africa in the Neoliberal World Order. Durham: Duke University Press.
  • Franco, J., L. Levidow, D. Fig, L. Goldfarb, M. Hönicke, and M. L. Mendonça. 2010. “Assumptions in the European Union Biofuels Policy: Frictions with Experiences in Germany, Brazil and Mozambique.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 37 (4): 661–698.
  • Gerber, J.-F. 2014. “The Role of Rural Indebtedness in the Evolution of Capitalism.” Journal of Peasant Studies 41: 729–747.
  • Gerber, J.-D., and J.-F. Gerber. 2017. “Decommodification as a Foundation for Ecological Economics.” Ecological Economics 131: 551–556.
  • Gerber, J.-D., E. Lieberherr, and P. Knoepfel. 2020. “Governing Contemporary Commons: the Institutional Resource Regime in Dialogue with Other Policy Frameworks.” Environmental Science and Policy, In press.
  • German, L., G. Schoneveld, and D. Gumbo. 2011. “The Local Social and Environmental Impacts of Smallholder-Based Biofuel Investments in Zambia.” Ecology and Society 16 (4): 12.
  • Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ). 2009. Foreign Direct Investment in Land. Information Brief. Eschborn: GTZ.
  • Gmür, D. 2019. “Grabbing the Female Commons: Large-Scale Land Acquisitions for Forest Plantations and Impacts on Gender Relations in Kilolo District, Iringa Region, Tanzania.” In The Commons in a Glocal World: Global Connections and Local Responses, edited by T. Haller, T. Breu, T. de Moor, C. Rohr, and H. Znoj, 301–317. London: Routledge.
  • Greer, J., and K. Bruno. 1996. Greenwash: Reality Behind Corporate Environmentalism. New York: Apex Press.
  • Hall, R., M. Edelman, S.M. Borras Jr, I. Scoones, B. White, and W. Wolford. 2015 “Resistance, Acquiescence or Incorporation? An Introduction to Land Grabbing and Political Reactions ‘from below’.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 42 (3–4): 467–488.
  • Hall, R., I. Scoones, and D. Tsikata. 2017. “Plantations, Outgrowers and Commercial Farming in Africa: Agricultural Commercialisation and Implications for Agrarian Change.” Journal of Peasant Studies 44 (3): 515–537.
  • Haller, T. 2010. Disputing the Floodplains. Leiden: Brill.
  • Haller, T. 2013. The Contested Floodplain. Lexington: Lanham.
  • Haller, T. 2019a. “The Different Meanings of Land in the Age of Neoliberalism.” Land 8 (7): 104.
  • Haller, T. 2019b. “Towards a New Institutional Political Ecology.” In The Commons in a Glocal World: Global Connections and Local Responses, edited by T. Haller, T. Breu, T. de Moor, C. Rohr, and H. Znoj, 99–120. London: Routledge.
  • Haller, T., G. Acciaioli, and S. Rist. 2016. “Constitutionality: Conditions for Crafting Local Ownership of Institution-Building Processes.” Society & Natural Resources 29 (1): 68–87.
  • Haller, T., G. Fokou, G. Mbeyale, and P. Meroka. 2013. “How Fit Turns Into Misfit and Back: Institutional Transformations of Pastoral Commons in African Floodplains.” Ecology and Society 18 (1): 34.
  • Hardin, G. 1968. “The Tragedy of the Commons.” Science 162: 1243–1248.
  • Harvey, D. 2005. A Brief History of Neoliberalism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Julia, and B. White. 2012. “Gendered Experience of Dispossession.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 40 (1): 263–270.
  • Kasanga, R. K., and N. A. Kotey. 2001. Land Management in Ghana: Building on Tradition and Modernity. London: International Institute for Environment and Development. https://pubs.iied.org/pdfs/9002IIED.pdf.
  • Kolk, A., and R. Van Tulder. 2006. “Poverty Alleviation as Business Strategy?” World Development 34 (5): 789–801.
  • Lanz, K. 2014. “Vers une nouvelle tragédie des terres communes?” POUR 222: 249–259.
  • Lanz, K., J.-D. Gerber, and T. Haller. 2018. “Land Grabbing, the State and Chiefs.” Development and Change 49 (6): 1526–1552.
  • Lanz, K., E. Prügl, and J.-D. Gerber. 2019. “The Poverty of Neoliberalized Feminism: Gender Equality in a ‘Best Practice’ Large-Scale Land Investment in Ghana.” The Journal of Peasant Studies. doi:10.1080/03066150.2019.1602525.
  • Lasswell, H. D. 1936. Politics: Who Gets What, When, How. New York: McGraw-Hill.
  • Lenz, K. 2006. “First-Comers and Late Comers: Indigenous Theories of Land Ownership in the West African Savanna.” In Land and the Politics of Belonging in West Africa, edited by R. Kuba, and K. Lenz, 34–57. Leiden: Brill.
  • Levy, D., and R. Kaplan. 2008. “Corporate Social Responsibility and Theories of Global Governance.” In Oxford Handbook of Corporate Social Responsibility, edited by A. Crane, A. McWilliams, D. Matten, J. Moon, and D. S. Siegel, 432–451. Oxford, NY: Oxford University Press.
  • Locher, M., and U. Müller-Böker. 2014. “Investors are Good, if They Follow the Rules.” Geographica Helvetica 69 (4): 249–258.
  • Locher, M., and E. Sulle. 2014. “Challenges and Methodological Flaws in Reporting the Global Land Rush: Observations From Tanzania.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 41 (4): 569–592.
  • Mann, H., and C. Smaller. 2010. Foreign Land Purchases for Agriculture: What Impact on Sustainable Development? New York: Sustainable Development Innovation Brief. United Nations.
  • Marfurt, F., F. Käser, and S. Lustenberger. 2016. “Local Perceptions and Vertical Perspectives of a Large Scale Land Acquisition Project in Northern Sierra Leone.” Homo Oeconomicus 33 (3): 261–279.
  • Marx, K. 1859. Zur Kritik der Politischen Ökonomie. Berlin: Franz Duncker.
  • McMichael, P. 2012. “The Land Grab and Corporate Food Regime Restructuring.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 39 (3–4): 681–701.
  • McWilliams, A., and D. Siegel. 2001. “Corporate Social Responsibility: A Theory of the Firm Perspective.” Academy of Management Review 26 (1): 117–127.
  • Meillassoux, C. 1982. Maiden, Meals and Money. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Muhle, U. 2011. The Politics of Corporate Social Responsibility. Frankfurt and New York: Campus Verlag.
  • Murray Li, T. M. 2011. “Centering Labor in the Land Grab Debate.” Journal of Peasant Studies 38 (2): 281–298.
  • Nelson, F., E. Sulle, and E. Lekaita. 2012. Land Grabbing and Political Transformation in Tanzania. Paper presented to the Global Land Grabbing II Conference. Cornell University, Ithaca NY, October 17–19, 2012.
  • Netting, R. McC. 1981. Balancing on an Alp. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Nyantaki-Frimpong, H., and R. Bezner-Kerr. 2017. “Land Grabbing, Social Differentiation, Intensified Migration and Food Security in Northern Ghana.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 44 (2): 421–444.
  • Ostrom, E. 1990. Governing the Commons. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Oxfam. 2011. Land and Power. Oxford: Oxfam.
  • Oya, C. 2013. “Methodological Reflections on ‘Land Grab’ Databases and the ‘Land Grab’ Literature ‘Rush’.” Journal of Peasant Studies 40 (3): 502–520.
  • Paulson, S. 2003. Political Ecology Across Spaces, Scales, and Social Groups. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
  • Peters, P. E. 2004. “Inequality and Social Conflict Over Land in Africa.” Journal of Agrarian Change 4 (3): 269–314.
  • Peters, P. E. 2013. “Land Appropriation, Surplus People and a Battle Over Visions of Agrarian Futures in Africa.” Journal of Peasant Studies 40 (3): 537–562.
  • Polanyi, K. 1957. The Great Transformation. Boston: Beacon.
  • Poulton, C., G. Tyler, P. Hazell, A. Dorward, J. Kydd, and M. Stockbridge. 2008. Commercial Agriculture in Africa. Washington, DC: World Bank.
  • Reinhardt, F. L., R. N. Stavins, and R. H. K. Vietor. 2008. “Corporate Social Responsibility through an Economic Lens.” Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 2 (2): 219–239.
  • Robbins, P. 2004. Political Ecology: A Critical Introduction. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.
  • Ryser, S. 2019. “The Anti-Politics Machine of Green Energy Development: The Moroccan Solar Project in Ouarzazate and Its Impact on Gendered Local Communities.” Land 8 (6): 100.
  • Schoneveld, G. V. 2017. “Host Country Governance and the African Land Rush.” Geoforum; Journal of Physical, Human, and Regional Geosciences 83: 119–132.
  • Schoneveld, G., L. A. German, and E. Nutakor. 2011. “Land-based Investments for Rural Development? A Grounded Analysis of the Local Impacts of Biofuel Feedstock Plantations in Ghana” Ecology and Society 16 (4): 10.
  • Scott, J. C. 1987. Weapons of the Weak. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
  • Soule, S. 2009. Contention and Corporate Social Responsibility. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • Svarstad, H., T. A. Benjaminsen, and R. Overå. 2018. “Power Theories in Political Ecology.” Journal of Political Ecology 25 (1): 350–363.
  • Swyngedouw, E. 2009. “The Political Economy and Political Ecology of the Hydro-Social Cycle” Journal of Contemporary Water Research & Education 142 (1): 56–60.
  • Tallontire, A. 2007. “CSR and Regulation: Towards a Framework for Understanding Private Standards Initiatives in the Agri-Food Chain.” Third World Quarterly 28 (4): 775–791.
  • Tsikata, D., and J. A. Yaro. 2014. “When a Good Business Model is Not Enough: Land Transactions and Gendered Livelihood Prospects in Rural Ghana.” Feminist Economics 20 (1): 202–226.
  • Vermeulen, S., and L. Cotula. 2010. “Over the Heads of Local People: Consultation, Consent, and Recompense in Large-Scale Land Deals for Biofuels Projects in Africa.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 37 (4): 899–916.
  • von Braun, J., and R. Meinzen-Dick. 2009. ‘Land Grabbing’ by Foreign Investors in Developing Countries: Risks and Opportunities. Washington: IFPRI.
  • World Bank. 2008. The World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development. Washington: World Bank.
  • Yin, R. K. 2009. Case Study Research. Los Angeles, CA: Sage.
  • Zerk, J. 2006. Multinationals and Corporate Responsibility. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • Zoomers, A. 2010. “Globalisation and the Foreignisation of Space: Seven Processes Driving the Current Global Land Grab.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 37 (2): 429–447.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.