• Madagascar: South Korean Land Deal Sparks Controversy
    • Global Voices
    • 23 November 2008

    South Korea has just leased half of all the arable land in Madagascar according to the Financial Times. This has stirred quite a debate in the Malagasy blogosphere about land sovereignty and economic development.

  • Pakistan: The great land grab
    • Dawn
    • 09 May 2009

    THESE days, as we follow the struggle against the Taliban in the northwest, we can be forgiven for missing other important news. For instance, I had filed away a report on plans to lease large chunks of agricultural land in Punjab and Sindh to overseas investors in the back of my mind, planning to write about it later. When I ran a Google search on the subject, however, I realised the enormity of the scam.When I ran a Google search

  • Egypt to grow wheat in Uganda
    • Daily News Egypt
    • 12 January 2010

    Uganda has agreed to allow Egypt to cultivate wheat on Ugandan soil.

  • Missing food security
    • Pakistan Observer
    • 18 April 2011

    UAE is ready to build small dams for cultivation on lands they would acquire in Pakistan, provided the government ensures that there is no ban on exports.

  • Coffee colonialism: Olam plantation displaces Lao farmers
    • CorpWatch
    • 04 June 2012

    Between the farmers and Olam lies one of Lao’s most powerful, and some allege, corrupt families, the Siphandones.

  • The global land rush: Catalyst for resource-driven conflict?
    • Sustainable Security
    • 02 August 2012

    Given the power imbalances at play, it is folly to assume that land-seekers will suddenly embrace, en masse, a set of voluntary rules promoting sustainable and equitable investor practices, says Michael Kugelman

  • Chinese firms and Gulf sheiks are snatching up farmland worldwide. Why?
    • Washington Post
    • 26 January 2013

    A slew of countries and investors — from Chinese state corporations to Gulf sheiks to Wall Street firms — have started buying up farmland overseas, in an apparent attempt to acquire as much precious soil and water as possible.

  • Cambodians, activists cheer Thai court’s move to allow lawsuit against Asia’s largest sugar firm
    • SCMP
    • 06 August 2020

    A Bangkok court ruled that about 3,000 Cambodians could proceed with a class-action suit against Mitr Phol, the world’s fourth-largest sugar producer. Farmers in Oddar Meanchey province are seeking compensation after the Cambodian government allocated land to the company for sugar plantations.

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