Addressing the Human Rights Impacts of 'Land Grabbing'
This Study discusses the human rights issues raised by large-scale land deals for plantation agriculture (‘land grabbing’) in low and middle-income countries. Firstly, the Study takes stock of available data on large land deals, their features and their driving forces. It finds that ‘land grabbing’ is a serious issue requiring urgent attention. Secondly, the Study conceptualises the link between land deals and human rights, reviews relevant international human rights law and discusses evidence on actual and potential human rights impacts. It finds that important human rights dimensions are at stake, and that compressions of human rights have been documented in some contexts. Thirdly, the Study identifies the areas of EU policy that are most directly relevant to addressing the human rights impacts of ‘land grabbing’, and in so doing it also briefly discusses developments in home and host countries as well as internationally. Fourthly, the Study proposes courses of action by which the EU, and the European Parliament in particular, can further prevent or remedy human rights violations linked to large-scale land deals.
Study
External author
COTULA Lorenzo
About this document
Publication type
Policy area
Keyword
- acquisition of property
- agricultural policy
- agricultural real estate
- AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY AND FISHERIES
- biofuel
- BUSINESS AND COMPETITION
- business classification
- business organisation
- civil law
- common commercial policy
- cooperation policy
- corporate governance
- cultivation of agricultural land
- developing countries
- development aid
- economic conditions
- economic policy
- ECONOMICS
- ENERGY
- energy policy
- EU aid
- EU finance
- EU financing
- EUROPEAN UNION
- farming systems
- human rights
- INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
- land policies
- land use
- LAW
- private sector
- rights and freedoms
- sustainable development
- TRADE
- trade policy