Land Grabbing and the Perplexities of Territorial Sovereignty

被引:7
|
作者
Jurkevics, Anna [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ British Columbia, Polit Sci, Vancouver, BC, Canada
关键词
land grabbing; sovereignty; territory; property; democracy; permanent sovereignty over natural resources; Locke; Kant; Arendt; GRABS;
D O I
10.1177/00905917211008591
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
The recent phenomenon of land grabbing-that is, the large-scale acquisition of private land rights by foreign investors-is an effect of increasing global demand for farmland, resources, and development opportunities. In 2008-2010 alone, land grabs covered approximately 56 million hectares of land, dispossessing and displacing inhabitants. This article proposes a philosophical framework for evaluating land grabbing as a practice of territorial alienation, whereby the private purchase of land can, under certain conditions, lead to a de facto alienation of territorial sovereignty. If land grabs alienate territorial sovereignty, it follows that inhabitants can claim a violation of the people's right to "permanent sovereignty over natural resources." However, because sovereignty is entangled in the historical and contemporary causes of land dispossession, I cast doubt on this strategy. Territorially sovereign regimes often undermine democratic land governance by obstructing participation in activities such as zoning, land use, property regulation, and environmental stewardship. These activities, which I theorize as practices of "world-building," are key to democracy because they give occupants a say in the shape of their common home. The perplexities of sovereignty in matters of land governance suggest that establishing democratic participation in rule over land requires fracturing sovereignty.
引用
收藏
页码:32 / 58
页数:27
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Territorial Sovereignty: A Philosophical Exploration
    Derin, Onur
    ETHICAL PERSPECTIVES, 2021, 28 (04) : 507 - 509
  • [32] Territorial sovereignty: A brief introduction
    Stilz, Anna
    JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY, 2021, 52 (01) : 6 - 9
  • [33] Territorial Sovereignty: A Philosophical Exploration
    De Schutter, Helder
    ETHICS & INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 2021, 35 (01) : 161 - 164
  • [34] Networked, rooted and territorial: green grabbing and resistance in Chiapas
    Rocheleau, Dianne E.
    JOURNAL OF PEASANT STUDIES, 2015, 42 (3-4): : 695 - 723
  • [35] The Powerful, the Powerless, and the Grabbing: Non-Nash Land Grabbing in the Lab
    Felix Albrecht
    Björn Frank
    Simone Gobien
    Maren Hartmann
    Özcan Ihtiyar
    Elina Khachatryan
    Nataliya Kusa
    Ahmed Rashad
    Mohamed Ismail Sabry
    Sondos Shaheen
    Thomas Stöber
    Homo Oeconomicus, 2016, 33 (3) : 219 - 242
  • [36] A structured checklist to identify connections between land grabbing and water grabbing
    Theesfeld, Insa
    COMMONS IN A GLOCAL WORLD: GLOBAL CONNECTIONS AND LOCAL RESPONSES, 2019, : 437 - 453
  • [37] Land grabbing in Uruguay: new forms of land concentration
    Oyhantcabal, Gabriel
    Narbondo, Ignacio
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES-REVUE CANADIENNE D ETUDES DU DEVELOPPEMENT, 2019, 40 (02): : 201 - 219
  • [38] Land concentration and land grabbing in Europe: a preliminary analysis
    van der Ploeg, Jan Douwe
    Franco, Jennifer C.
    Borras, Saturnino M., Jr.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES-REVUE CANADIENNE D ETUDES DU DEVELOPPEMENT, 2015, 36 (02): : 147 - 162
  • [39] The Law and Land Grabbing: Friend or Foe?
    Wily, Liz Alden
    LAW AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW, 2014, 7 (02) : 207 - 242
  • [40] Grabbing land legally: A Marxist analysis
    Ozsu, Umut
    LEIDEN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW, 2019, 32 (02) : 215 - 233