Abstract

Domestic and international capital controlling Guatemala's sugarcane and oil palm industries are deploying a dual investment strategy in the context of global financial, energy, food and environmental crises. They allocate current booming revenues to high-cost, long-term investments and they open and adapt new territories for cultivation. Under a new "extractivist governmentality", corporate land grabs aim to control land and natural resources as well as land-based wealth and the labour that produces it. Land ownership is being (re)concentrated and social relations reshaped: compensation to dispossessed indigenous peasants for their land is insufficient to boost non-farm livelihoods or to regain access to land. This paper describes efforts to institutionalise and legitimise this project, as well as the ongoing resistance to it.

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doi.org/10.1080/02255189.2012.743455, hdl.handle.net/1765/76088
Canadian Journal of Development Studies
International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University (ISS)

Alonso-Fradejas, A. (2012). Land control-Grabbing in guatemala: The political economy of contemporary agrarian change. Canadian Journal of Development Studies, 33(4), 509–528. doi:10.1080/02255189.2012.743455