{"id":4245,"date":"2015-05-06T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2015-05-06T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ourlandourbusiness.org\/when-fear-and-favor-rule-the-world-banks-systemic-land-displacement\/"},"modified":"2015-05-06T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2015-05-06T00:00:00","slug":"when-fear-and-favor-rule-the-world-banks-systemic-land-displacement","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ourlandourbusiness.org\/fr\/when-fear-and-favor-rule-the-world-banks-systemic-land-displacement\/","title":{"rendered":"When Fear and Favor Rule: The World Bank\u2019s Systemic Land Displacement"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"l-subsection\"><div class=\"l-subsection-h\"><div class=\"l-subsection-hh g-html i-cf\"><p>Source: The Feminist Wire<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"date-display-single\" property=\"dc:date\" datatype=\"xsd:dateTime\" content=\"2015-05-06T00:00:00-07:00\">May 6, 2015<\/span><\/p>\n<p>According to the <a href=\"http:\/\/unctad.org\/en\/pages\/publicationwebflyer.aspx?publicationid=666\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">UN\u2019s Trade and Environment Review<\/a>,  food security, poverty, gender inequality, and climate change can all  be collectively addressed with a systemic paradigm shift away from giant  monoculture agriculture to localized organic farms.\u00a0But to address  where we need to be, we must first understand where we are. As such, I\u2019d  like to focus in on the issue of land grabs.<\/p>\n<p>A land grab occurs when a wealthy transnational corporation or  country buys up or leases land in a poorer state at especially low  rates. Why does this practice take place? As companies grow and expand  their profits, they exhaust their domestic markets and resources; they  are constantly seeking out new markets abroad and regions where oil and  other profitable resources can be extracted. So, essentially, global  capitalism offers the notion that there will always be new markets,  continuous resources, and sacrifice zones. These sacrifice zones are  places where land, resources, and cheap labor are exploited, where  extracted resources are processed and taken to core regions of global  capitalism, like the U.S. and Western Europe, and where waste gets  dumped back into these \u201cdisposable peripheries.\u201d <a href=\"http:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/environment\/2010\/mar\/07\/food-water-africa-land-grab\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Land grabs have become more and more prominent<\/a>,  with purchases being made by Middle Eastern emirate states, Saudi  Arabia, and China. Due to years of consecutive drought, Saudi Arabia,  formerly one of the Middle East\u2019s largest wheat-growers, began reducing  domestic production by 12% per\u00a0year as of 2008 to conserve water at  home. Carbon offset programs, a market-based solution, also fuel land  grabs. Corporations <a href=\"http:\/\/www.oaklandinstitute.org\/darker-side-green\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">purchase land to convert to forestry plantations<\/a>,  which destroy biodiversity, in order to offset carbon pollution but  also to gain revenues, through the selling of carbon credits.<\/p>\n<p>The climate crisis is a structural issue perpetuated by racial and  gender inequalities. Land grabs overburden the developing world\u2019s  agricultural labor force, a group that\u00a0produces 60-80% of the world\u2019s  food. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.fao.org\/docrep\/013\/i2050e\/i2050e.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Forty-three percent of this workforce is comprised of women, yet women make up less than 20% of landholders<\/a>.\u00a0Grabs  undermine the ability for small and local producers to survive,  forcibly replacing women-led, regenerative farming with unsustainable  food production led by exploitative corporations like Monsanto.  Industrial scale farming is reliant on pesticides, herbicides, and  intensive water usage, and it turns landscapes into mono-culture  plantations. Plus,\u00a0land grabs are for the production of biofuels,  further displacing farmers and food production in regions where food  scarcity is rife. Land grabs happen most often in areas with low  recognition of land rights, occurring greatly in places where  governments own most of the land and have systems of land tenure. This  disproportionately affects women, as most lack sufficient land rights.  And because they lack the rights, they cannot\u00a0receive compensatory  rental fees from agribusiness companies when these exist. The land grabs  that enable extraction, deemed legal under trade policies, reinforce  imperialist notions of entitlement (to land and labor) and racial  superiority.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Role of the World Bank<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>So much land is being bought up for intensive industrial agriculture  that we are witnessing the greatest change in land ownership since the  colonial era, with wealthier nations buying up the land of sovereign  states. Many see this phenomenon as a new colonialism, where people are  driven off their land for the purpose of capital accumulation for the  global elite. Across the globe, land that once held cultural and  ancestral significance is being commodified and made available to those  with money.<\/p>\n<p>This is all enabled through international trade policies set by  institutions like the World Bank, created with the intent to reduce  poverty and aid the Global South in development. So why place a critical  lens on the World Bank? Because it is\u00a0a proxy for\u00a0capitalism and  colonialism, and under the guise of development it pursues \u201cgrowth at  all costs\u201d and undercuts people from determining their livelihoods and  economic destinies. Essentially, the World Bank takes the money it makes  from trading on Wall Street and donations from wealthier nations and  distributes around $30billion per year, mainly in loans, to poor nations  in the name of promoting economic development. But really,\u00a0the World  Bank is a link between Wall Street and the Global South, with an extreme  ideology that any economic activity is good, regardless of who reaps  all or most of the benefits (a classic feature of neoliberal \u201ctrickle  down economics\u201d). It promotes the belief that open markets for the  private sector will bring more growth and development to rural areas  than state-led or community-driven programs.<\/p>\n<p>The World Bank has a Doing Business Report, that ranks  countries based on \u201cease of doing business\u201d and the fewer regulations a  country has, the higher it\u00a0scores. This sets the parameters for what  \u201cbusiness friendly\u201d looks like for countries desperately seeking aid and  investment. Regulations that protect workers and the land are  considered bad, while those that protect investors and companies, by  enabling them to land grab and avoid taxes, are good. This sort of  one-size-fits-all approach enriches elites and ignores the fact that  certain regulations are necessary for a fair and environmentally safe  society. What the World Bank considers good for business is detrimental  to some of the world\u2019s most vulnerable communities and land, creating a  race to the bottom.<\/p>\n<p>The report\u2019s ranking system is considered a powerful tool in  compelling countries to deregulate their markets (driving a quarter of  the 2,100 policy changes recorded since the first edition launch in  2003) and for businesses and lenders, including the World Bank, to  invest in particular regions. Furthermore, the struggle for  transnationals or wealthier nations to gain land is also the struggle  for political influence. The practice of land grabbing spreads a  neocolonial agenda in countries that appear sovereign. Institutions like  the World Bank influence policy by setting aid conditionality on  countries seeking aid. Policies benefit corporate interests at the  expense of the social, health, and political needs of people in these  countries.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Why Africa? (41% of Land Grab Deals)<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Seventy percent of the population of\u00a0sub-saharan Africa lives on  traditional lands that, through colonial history, became state lands in  independent Africa. This is why governments, again desperate for aid and  investment, look to the private sector and sell off or lease vast  amounts of land, at $1 per hectare per year, without consulting local  people or offering legal compensation. Governments and investors  propagate myths that land is going to waste, which under the false  paradigm of an incessant need to accumulate and exploit capital may seem  true. However, for indigenous populations like those in the Gambella  region in Ethiopia, where each community looks after and tends their  territory, rivers, and farmlands, this is certainly untrue. Much of the  work of the Global South is at risk because it is incompatible with  today\u2019s development model of endless profit-seeking.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Rightful Resistance<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The next logical step would be to look at what is being done to  counter these historical and systemic issues. One notable struggle is  the fight to secure more land rights for women. From East Asia to  Africa, women make up a majority of the agricultural labor force, yet  rarely own the land they steward and depend on to survive and provide to  their families. This means that women must access land through their  fathers, brothers, husbands, or some man who controls the land. This  makes women especially vulnerable because once they lose their  connection to their male relative, they lose their land. The issue of  women\u2019s land rights is being addressed and making strides in countries  like Kenya and Tanzania. In 2010, Kenya adopted a new constitution  granting women unprecedented protections for land. More recently, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/global-development\/poverty-matters\/2014\/oct\/15\/women-tanzania-equal-land-rights\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Tanzania\u2019s proposed new constitution<\/a> equips women with equal rights to own and use land.\u00a0Securing land rights for women is a foundational way to increase income, security, health, and empowerment.<\/p>\n<p>Another place to plug into may be the \u201c<a href=\"http:\/\/ourlandourbusiness.org\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Our Land Our Business<\/a>\u201d  campaign. Over 200 different social movements and civil society  organizations (CSOs), from peasant movements in developing countries to  think tanks and activist groups globally have come together to demand an  end to the Doing Business Rankings. The campaign began with a focus on  one policy but has grown to a deeper critique of how the World  Bank\u2019s\u00a0approach to development is undemocratic, pro-corporate,  extractive, and anti-poor. The\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.truth-out.org\/opinion\/item\/26643-world-versus-bank-the-return-of-the-world-bank-and-the-people-s-resistance#\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">first public act<\/a> was\u00a0the World Bank actions, a twelve-city string of global  demonstrations that occurred on October 10 in front of World Bank  offices around the world.\u00a0Representatives of civil society organizations  were invited by the World Bank to attend an annual board meeting  concerning their revised safeguard policies, which in reality served to  revoke a lot of the protections. Many of these policies were established  about 20 years ago after decades of civil society protesting.  Representatives walked out of the consultations to protest the new draft  and met members of civil society and took to the streets. The global  solidarity of the Our Land Our Business campaign illustrates the need to  connect the struggles of those facing new forms of colonialism to those  of our hurting environment.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Tides Are Rising And So Are We<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>As we\u2019ve seen, the World Bank and other global institutions created  to \u201caid in development\u201d have in fact done the opposite. Or maybe I  shouldn\u2019t say opposite, because they have aided in development, just the  wrong kind (and for the wrong people). The development these financial  institutions are responsible for is the spreading of mass inequalities,  corporate personhood, and land grabs. The issue\u00a0of land grabs  disproportionately affects womxn, as womxn lack land rights across the  globe. To reiterate, less than 20% of womxn hold land and most often  must access land through male relatives. Despite this and the myriad  ways womxn are further systematically marginalized, solutions to climate  change are known and practiced by strong and resilient womxn. Returning  to sustainable, organic, and womxn-led farming techniques is one way to  mitigate climate change, increase food security and lessen gender  inequality and poverty.<\/p>\n<p>A more horizontal worldview, one that sees us as part of nature and  understands that an economic system seeking to infinitely grow on a  finite planet can never be sustainable or just, lies at the heart of  feminist environmentalisms. As small scale farmers, as community  organizers, activists and educators, womxn are compellingly shifting the  ways we relate to the earth.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/thefeministwire.com\/2015\/04\/when-fear-and-favor-rule-the-world-banks-systemic-land-displacement\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">View Full Article at The Feminist Wire <\/a><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Source: The Feminist Wire May 6, 2015 According to the UN\u2019s Trade and Environment Review, food security, poverty, gender inequality, and climate&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":12,"featured_media":3452,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[108],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-4245","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-dans-les-medias"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v20.11 - 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