2020-01-28
Climate change and land: Insights from Myanmar
Publication
Publication
World Development , Volume 129 (2020)
Climate change and land are linked – politically. Climate change politics intersects with the global land
rush in extensive and complex ways, the impacts of which affect villagers profoundly. These interconnections
occur in direct and indirect ways and are often subtle, but that does not make them less important;
it only makes the challenge of governing such dynamics in the interests of marginalized working poor
people even more difficult. In this paper, we focus our analysis on indirect and subtle interconnections.
Examining empirical cases in Northern Shan State in Myanmar, we conclude that these interconnections
occur in at least three broad ways, in which climate change politics can be: (i) a trigger for land grabbing,
(ii) a legitimating process for land grabs, or (iii) a de-legitimating process for people’s climate change mitigation
and adaptation practices. These interconnections in turn stoke old and provoke new political axes
of conflict within and between state and social forces.
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| doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2019.104864, hdl.handle.net/1765/123979 | |
| World Development | |
| Organisation | International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University (ISS) |
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Borras, S., jr., Franco, J., & Nam, Z. (2020). Climate change and land: Insights from Myanmar. World Development, 129 (2020). doi:10.1016/j.worlddev.2019.104864 |
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