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Brazilian Agricultural Frontier: Land Grabbing, Land Policy, and Conflicts

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posted on 2024-09-05, 21:42 authored by Matheus Sehn Korting, Débora Assumpcao Lima, Jose Sobreiro Filho
This article sheds light on the forms of land appropriation in the agricultural frontier regions of Brazil in line with the concepts of land and green grabbing. With less stringent environmental laws, the Cerrado presents itself as a ‘sacrifice zone’, where grabbers and large agricultural producers have sought to register lands of the Amazon biome as ‘Cerrado’ or an undefined biome zone land. It seeks to understand what happens in territories when power technologies, that is, disciplinary mechanisms such as the Rural Environmental Cadastre (CAR), are activated and how the state has regulated land appropriation and green grabbing as a new meaning of appropriation of nature. This has created obstacles for the struggle and resistance of socio-territorial movements for land distribution, as confirmed by the growing lethality of conflicts in Brazilian frontier zones that are coveted by the grabbers.

Funding

British Council

History

Publisher

Institute of Development Studies

Citation

Korting, M.S.; Lima, D.A. and Sobreiro Filho, J. (2023) 'Brazilian Agricultural Frontier: Land Grabbing, Land Policy, and Conflicts', IDS Bulletin 54.1: 73–88, DOI: 10.19088/1968-2023.106

Series

IDS Bulletin 54.1

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

IDS Item Types

Article

Copyright holder

Institute of Development Studies

Country

Brazil

Language

en

IDS team

Rural Futures

Identifier ISSN

1759-5436

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    Volume 54. Issue 1: Frontier Territories: Countering the Green Revolution Legacy in the Brazilian Cerrado

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