Madagascar: South Korean Land Deal Sparks Controversy
    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.
    • Global Voices
    • 23 November 2008
    PE firm rethinks Laos/Cambodia fund
    FIDP has launched a Cambodia and Laos fund, “an extended China play” that will focus largely on agriculture, seeking to benefit from China’s desire for food security.
    • Financial Times
    • 18 April 2010
    Brazilian farmland group set for HK listing
    A farmland development group backed by Jacob Rothschild is to become the first Brazilian company to list on the Hong Kong stock exchange
    • Financial Times
    • 18 July 2010
    How your 401(k) is helping destroy the Amazon rainforest
    The growing financialisation of Brazilian agribusiness is enabling foreign investment in the industry most responsible for deforestation - and land grabbing
    • Intercept
    • 23 November 2021
    A global hunt for water profit risks draining cities dry
    Bloomberg exposé on Frank Timis' plan to turn Les Fermes de la Teranga (ex-Senhuile) into a major source of animal feed for the Gulf States and the implications for Dakar's water supply
    • Bloomberg
    • 14 November 2023
    La colonisation agricole, nouvel apanage des pays riches
    Les organisations mondiales et les ONG commencent à s'alarmer de l'ampleur du rachat des terres agricoles. Le problème, selon elles, c'est que ce sont les gouvernements des pays hôtes qui négocient directement les accords avec les investisseurs, sans consulter les populations concernées.
    • Journal du Net
    • 14 January 2010
    BRICS grab African land and sovereignty
    BRICS states, except Russia, are enhancing and facilitating land grabs abroad in a way that is inconsistent with their proclamations of sustainable development, cooperation solidarity, and respect of national sovereignty.
    • Pambazuka
    • 28 Mar 2013
    Accaparement des terres : il est temps de tirer la sonnette d'alarme
    Une initiative internationale jetant la lumière sur l’ensemble de ces transactions est désormais un impératif autant qu’un préalable pour protéger cette agriculture que nous avons plus que jamais en partage
    • Nouvel Observateur
    • 09 July 2016
    Banque mondiale : en attendant le rapport sur l’accaparement des terres africaines
    La polémique autour de l'accaparement de terres, en particulier en Afrique, est relancée par une étude de la Banque mondiale qui tarde à être publiée alors que le cours du blé repart à la hausse
    • RFI
    • 17 August 2010
    UAE may invest US$500m in Pakistan farms
    The Government is considering the purchase of farmland worth US$500 million (Dh1.8 billion) in Pakistan as part of a strategy to lower food import costs.
    • The National
    • 08 June 2008
    Wish you weren't here: The devastating effects of the new colonialists
    A new breed of colonialism is rampaging across the world, with rich nations buying up the natural resources of developing countries that can ill afford to sell. Some staggering deals have already been done, but angry locals are now trying to stop the landgrabs
    • The Independent
    • 09 August 2009
    Responsible farmland investing? Current efforts to regulate land grabs will make things worse
    From the World Bank to pension funds, efforts are under way to regulate land grabs through the creation of codes and standards. Rather than help financial and corporate elites to "responsibly invest" in farmland, we need them to stop and divest.
    • GRAIN
    • 22 August 2012
    Firm shows how to `farm at end of a long dirt road`
    Kilombero Plantations Limited chief executive officer Carter Coleman talks about his company's large-scale farming operations in Tanzania, including the removal of the "Project Affected Persons" previously farming the lands.
    • IPP Media
    • 16 June 2011
    Global land grab
    Contrary to past trends, countries in the Global South are initiating much of the investment.
    • Foreign Policy in Focus
    • 18 June 2009
    Glencore, China's CIC in cooperation pact
    China's $200 billion sovereign wealth fund has added privately-held commodities trader Glencore International AG, which also controls around 300,000 ha of farmland, to its roster of approved investment partners as it deepens its access to global raw material markets, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters
    • Reuters
    • 17 September 2009
    World Bank report on land grabbing: Beyond the smoke and mirrors
    GRAIN says the World Bank's much anticipated report on the global farmland grab is both a disappointment and a failure.
    • GRAIN
    • 15 September 2010
    In bid for food security, Qatar sows seeds globally
    Hassad Food knows how to shop. The $1b subsidiary of Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund finalised a $500m agreement last year to grow wheat & rice on 100,000 ha in Sudan and has announced plans to invest $700m worldwide this year.
    • The National
    • 02 September 2010
    Le rapport de la Banque mondiale sur l’accaparement des terres : au-delà du rideau de fumée
    Du point de vue de GRAIN, ce rapport très attendu de la Banque mondiale est à la fois une déception et un échec.
    • GRAIN
    • 17 September 2010
    China and the great global landgrab
    Stephen Marks looks at the latest rush by China and countries in the middle east to sign lease agreements in poor countries for agricultural production, and what this trend means in terms of food security and access to arable land for local populations.
    • Pambazuka
    • 11 December 2008
    The global water grab: A primer
    Water grabbing refers to situations where powerful actors take control of valuable water resources for their own benefit, depriving local communities whose livelihoods often depend on these resources and ecosystems.
    • TNI
    • 29 Mar 2012
    Twenty-first-century land grabs: Accumulation by agricultural dispossession
    For the world’s people to have secure access to the quantity and quality of food needed for a decent life, the land grabs and the development of large, highly mechanized factory farms must stop.
    • Monthly Review
    • 02 November 2013
    The global farmland grab in 2016: how big, how bad?
    Eight years after releasing its first report on land grabbing, GRAIN publishes a new dataset documenting nearly 500 cases of land grabbing around the world.
    • GRAIN
    • 14 June 2016
    Harvard's billion-dollar farmland fiasco
    One of the world's major buyers of farmland is under fire for their involvement in land conflicts, environmental destruction and risky investments. A new report by GRAIN and Rede Social de Justiça e Direitos Humanos presents, for the first time, a comprehensive analysis of Harvard University's controversial investments in global farmland.
    • GRAIN and Rede Social de Justiça e Direitos Humanos
    • 06 September 2018
    A new wave of land grabs strikes Tanzania
    Tanzania’s experience in the global land grab post-2008 led to shattered hopes, land conflicts & misery for small farmers. Yet, the current govt risks repeating history. A new report looks at this critical moment for Tanzania's small farmers & pastoralists.
    • GRAIN
    • 02 February 2024
    Who really benefits from the creation of a land market in Ukraine?
    In the country known as the “breadbasket of Europe,” agriculture has been dominated by oligarchs and multinational corporations since the privatization of state-owned land following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Will this change, now that a controversial law to create a land market entered into effect on July 1, 2021?
    • Oakland Institute
    • 06 August 2021
    Under the spotlight: Chinese banks' risky agribusiness portfolio
    China is one of the world's largest consumers of agricultural commodities such as soy and palm oil that drive deforestation globally. But it isn’t just Chinese consumption of these commodities that is helping fuel forest destruction. Global Witness new analysis sheds a spotlight on the often-overlooked role of Chinese banks as some of the biggest global financiers of deforestation.
    • Global Witness
    • 07 June 2021
    The digitalisation of land: more data, less land
    The digitalisation of information on land and natural resources is exacerbating land grabbing in the remaining agricultural frontiers of Latin America.
    • GRAIN
    • 15 April 2022
    Foreign pension funds and land grabbing in Brazil
    A New York company managing the retirement savings of workers in Sweden, the US and Canada is evading Brazilian laws on foreign investment to acquire farmlands from a businessman accused of violently displacing local communities.
    • GRAIN
    • 16 November 2015
    Assets to axes: How Harvard’s land investments inspired fear in Brazil’s Cerrado
    Farmland purchases by the Harvard endowment contributed to a climate of anxiety, fear, and strain on Brazilian subsistence farmers.
    • The Crimson
    • 17 April 2023
    How TIAA Funds Environmental Disaster in Latin America
    Pension fund giant TIAA is investing its clients’ funds in farmland and agribusinesses tied to environmental and human rights abuses in Latin America.
    • Nacla
    • 06 January 2017
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