How national and local contexts shape the impacts of foreign investment in land: a comparative analysis from three African countries

Recent changes in the global agro–food–energy system, driven in part by consumption trends and climate change mitigation efforts, have led to renewed interest in investment in agriculture and a rush to acquire land among investors. The broader socio-economic and ecological impacts of these land use changes are not always clear and many assessments focus mainly on short-term effects at the local level, without relating them to the wider agrarian and socio-economic transformations that are now underway. Against this backdrop, the objective of the Belmont Forum supported AFGROLAND project is to analyze how large-scale investments in land and agriculture impact on natural resources, poverty, food security, rural economies and local policies in African countries. The project focuses on 3 countries that are, according to a decreasing level of experience in terms of large scale agricultural investments: Kenya, Mozambique and Madagascar. Based on political sciences, economy, sociology, geography and agronomy analytical grid, it adopts a mixed methods approach coupling GIS data, qualitative interviews and quantitative data production (households survey) to conduct within- and cross-country analyses of these dynamics of agricultural investments. The project comprises 3 main components. It tries to understand what drivers and rules of the game pull, push or regulate agricultural investments at the global and at the national level. It also deciphers the investors' strategies and studies how their business models evolve (or not) in relation to global drivers and national/local governance. It then evaluates how these agricultural investments impact on natural resources (soil, water and vegetation), poverty as well as food security at the national, local and household levels. By taking a cross-country comparative approach, looking at three country cases in the South-Eastern sub-region of Africa, we shed light on differences in the national contexts that reshape the influence of international drivers and shape the concrete outcomes and impact of these agricultural investments. Preliminary results of the project suggest that although the international drivers at work are the same, the outcomes at local levels in terms of land use change, ecological impacts, food security and livelihoods differ significantly due to differences in national policy frameworks, land tenure rights, business climate, resource endowments and path-dependencies regarding investment and business practices. In our presentation, we discuss those differences in terms of the business models applied, the success and failures of investments, as well as their impacts at local level, considering the three dimension of sustainable development. The presentation will contribute to a better understanding of how national contexts mediate the impacts of distant drivers on local-level land system outcomes. Furthermore, these results contribute to a better understanding of the multi-scale impacts of global agro-food-energy system changes, allowing for the identification of leverage points for managing sustainability trade-offs and synergies in the global land rush.

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Main Authors: Giger, Markus, Anseeuw, Ward, Fouilleux, Eve, Mercandalli, Sara, Burnod, Perrine, Eckert, Sandra, Kiteme, Boniface, Oberlack, Christoph, Zahringer, Julie, Adelle, Camilla, Messerli, Peter
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: University of Bern
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/586990/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/586990/1/AFGROLAND_Pres_ICRD-final.pdf
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description Recent changes in the global agro–food–energy system, driven in part by consumption trends and climate change mitigation efforts, have led to renewed interest in investment in agriculture and a rush to acquire land among investors. The broader socio-economic and ecological impacts of these land use changes are not always clear and many assessments focus mainly on short-term effects at the local level, without relating them to the wider agrarian and socio-economic transformations that are now underway. Against this backdrop, the objective of the Belmont Forum supported AFGROLAND project is to analyze how large-scale investments in land and agriculture impact on natural resources, poverty, food security, rural economies and local policies in African countries. The project focuses on 3 countries that are, according to a decreasing level of experience in terms of large scale agricultural investments: Kenya, Mozambique and Madagascar. Based on political sciences, economy, sociology, geography and agronomy analytical grid, it adopts a mixed methods approach coupling GIS data, qualitative interviews and quantitative data production (households survey) to conduct within- and cross-country analyses of these dynamics of agricultural investments. The project comprises 3 main components. It tries to understand what drivers and rules of the game pull, push or regulate agricultural investments at the global and at the national level. It also deciphers the investors' strategies and studies how their business models evolve (or not) in relation to global drivers and national/local governance. It then evaluates how these agricultural investments impact on natural resources (soil, water and vegetation), poverty as well as food security at the national, local and household levels. By taking a cross-country comparative approach, looking at three country cases in the South-Eastern sub-region of Africa, we shed light on differences in the national contexts that reshape the influence of international drivers and shape the concrete outcomes and impact of these agricultural investments. Preliminary results of the project suggest that although the international drivers at work are the same, the outcomes at local levels in terms of land use change, ecological impacts, food security and livelihoods differ significantly due to differences in national policy frameworks, land tenure rights, business climate, resource endowments and path-dependencies regarding investment and business practices. In our presentation, we discuss those differences in terms of the business models applied, the success and failures of investments, as well as their impacts at local level, considering the three dimension of sustainable development. The presentation will contribute to a better understanding of how national contexts mediate the impacts of distant drivers on local-level land system outcomes. Furthermore, these results contribute to a better understanding of the multi-scale impacts of global agro-food-energy system changes, allowing for the identification of leverage points for managing sustainability trade-offs and synergies in the global land rush.
format conference_item
author Giger, Markus
Anseeuw, Ward
Fouilleux, Eve
Mercandalli, Sara
Burnod, Perrine
Eckert, Sandra
Kiteme, Boniface
Oberlack, Christoph
Zahringer, Julie
Adelle, Camilla
Messerli, Peter
spellingShingle Giger, Markus
Anseeuw, Ward
Fouilleux, Eve
Mercandalli, Sara
Burnod, Perrine
Eckert, Sandra
Kiteme, Boniface
Oberlack, Christoph
Zahringer, Julie
Adelle, Camilla
Messerli, Peter
How national and local contexts shape the impacts of foreign investment in land: a comparative analysis from three African countries
author_facet Giger, Markus
Anseeuw, Ward
Fouilleux, Eve
Mercandalli, Sara
Burnod, Perrine
Eckert, Sandra
Kiteme, Boniface
Oberlack, Christoph
Zahringer, Julie
Adelle, Camilla
Messerli, Peter
author_sort Giger, Markus
title How national and local contexts shape the impacts of foreign investment in land: a comparative analysis from three African countries
title_short How national and local contexts shape the impacts of foreign investment in land: a comparative analysis from three African countries
title_full How national and local contexts shape the impacts of foreign investment in land: a comparative analysis from three African countries
title_fullStr How national and local contexts shape the impacts of foreign investment in land: a comparative analysis from three African countries
title_full_unstemmed How national and local contexts shape the impacts of foreign investment in land: a comparative analysis from three African countries
title_sort how national and local contexts shape the impacts of foreign investment in land: a comparative analysis from three african countries
publisher University of Bern
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/586990/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/586990/1/AFGROLAND_Pres_ICRD-final.pdf
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-5869902020-04-24T12:02:03Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/586990/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/586990/ How national and local contexts shape the impacts of foreign investment in land: a comparative analysis from three African countries. Giger Markus, Anseeuw Ward, Fouilleux Eve, Mercandalli Sara, Burnod Perrine, Eckert Sandra, Kiteme Boniface, Oberlack Christoph, Zahringer Julie, Adelle Camilla, Messerli Peter. 2017. . Bern : University of Bern, Résumé, 2 p. International Conference on Research for Development ICRD 2017. 4, Bern, Suisse, 5 Septembre 2017/8 Septembre 2017. Researchers How national and local contexts shape the impacts of foreign investment in land: a comparative analysis from three African countries Giger, Markus Anseeuw, Ward Fouilleux, Eve Mercandalli, Sara Burnod, Perrine Eckert, Sandra Kiteme, Boniface Oberlack, Christoph Zahringer, Julie Adelle, Camilla Messerli, Peter eng 2017 University of Bern Recent changes in the global agro–food–energy system, driven in part by consumption trends and climate change mitigation efforts, have led to renewed interest in investment in agriculture and a rush to acquire land among investors. The broader socio-economic and ecological impacts of these land use changes are not always clear and many assessments focus mainly on short-term effects at the local level, without relating them to the wider agrarian and socio-economic transformations that are now underway. Against this backdrop, the objective of the Belmont Forum supported AFGROLAND project is to analyze how large-scale investments in land and agriculture impact on natural resources, poverty, food security, rural economies and local policies in African countries. The project focuses on 3 countries that are, according to a decreasing level of experience in terms of large scale agricultural investments: Kenya, Mozambique and Madagascar. Based on political sciences, economy, sociology, geography and agronomy analytical grid, it adopts a mixed methods approach coupling GIS data, qualitative interviews and quantitative data production (households survey) to conduct within- and cross-country analyses of these dynamics of agricultural investments. The project comprises 3 main components. It tries to understand what drivers and rules of the game pull, push or regulate agricultural investments at the global and at the national level. It also deciphers the investors' strategies and studies how their business models evolve (or not) in relation to global drivers and national/local governance. It then evaluates how these agricultural investments impact on natural resources (soil, water and vegetation), poverty as well as food security at the national, local and household levels. By taking a cross-country comparative approach, looking at three country cases in the South-Eastern sub-region of Africa, we shed light on differences in the national contexts that reshape the influence of international drivers and shape the concrete outcomes and impact of these agricultural investments. Preliminary results of the project suggest that although the international drivers at work are the same, the outcomes at local levels in terms of land use change, ecological impacts, food security and livelihoods differ significantly due to differences in national policy frameworks, land tenure rights, business climate, resource endowments and path-dependencies regarding investment and business practices. In our presentation, we discuss those differences in terms of the business models applied, the success and failures of investments, as well as their impacts at local level, considering the three dimension of sustainable development. The presentation will contribute to a better understanding of how national contexts mediate the impacts of distant drivers on local-level land system outcomes. Furthermore, these results contribute to a better understanding of the multi-scale impacts of global agro-food-energy system changes, allowing for the identification of leverage points for managing sustainability trade-offs and synergies in the global land rush. conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/586990/1/AFGROLAND_Pres_ICRD-final.pdf text Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html