The new frontier

David K. Deng | Norwegian People’s Aid | 2011

African farmland has come under increasing pressure from commercial land-based investments in recent years. The

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimates that from 2007 to 2010, foreign interests acquired 20 million

hectares of land in Africa (Graham et al. 2010). Some analysts see opportunities in this trend, asserting that if African

states are able to enact certain regulatory reforms, they can harness this surge in foreign investment to provide jobs

and development for rural communities. For decades, the agricultural sector in sub-Saharan Africa has been neglected

in both domestic public policies and development cooperation. If done responsibly, proponents argue, the influx of

foreign investment can increase public revenues and improve farmers’ access to technology and credit, leading to

a revitalization of agriculture. Others are more skeptical. Critics have dubbed it the ‘global land grab’, warning that

land acquisitions on this scale stand to deny millions of land users access to vital natural resources, undermine

food security, and exacerbate tenure insecurity. They criticize international efforts to put in place a voluntary code of

conduct for ‘whitewashing’ the problem and diverting attention away from alternative development pathways that may

be more beneficial for rural populations, such as building the productive capacity of smallholder farmers. The real

problem, these critics assert, lies in the global industrial food and energy complex which deprives rural populations

of their land in order to provide cheap food and energy production for the developed world (Borras and Franco 2010:

515).

This report was prepared as part of a baseline survey of large-scale land-based investment in Southern Sudan for

Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA). It presents data on 28 foreign and domestic investments planned or underway across

the ten states of Southern Sudan. Its purpose is to introduce policy-makers, academics and civil society in Southern

Sudan to some of the salient aspects of land investments. The data may also provide insights for the design of

initiatives to address the challenges of commercial land-based investments moving forward. Section One lays out

basic background information on the region. Section Two outlines relevant legal provisions, which in theory are meant

to regulate large-scale land investments in Southern Sudan. Section Three summarizes the research methodology.

Section Four presents the baseline data, and Section Five offers a series of preliminary observations. Section Six

concludes with recommendations for stakeholders involved with large-scale land investments in Southern Sudan to

consider moving forward.

Seite(n) | 48
Sprache | English
ursprüngliche Herkunft | http://www.npaid.org/filestore/NPA_New_Frontier.pdf
The new frontier