Litcius/Paper detail

From resolving land disputes to agrarian justice – dealing with the structural crisis of plantation agriculture in eastern DR Congo

M. van Leeuwen, Gillian Mathys, Lotje de Vries, G. van der Haar

2020The Journal of Peasant Studies32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Land disputes in conflict-affected settings are often considered as a security threat, to be addressed through mediation and strengthening the rule of law. This overlooks the roots of land conflicts in longer-term processes of agrarian development and worsening conditions of land and labour access. A case-study of a dispute between former plantation labourers and concession holders in eastern DR Congo shows mediation's incapacity to counter perceived structural injustices in land access and difficulties in making a living. While dispute resolution may temporarily calm down tensions, it cannot substitute for fundamental political choices vis-a-vis wider questions of agrarian development and justice.

Topics & Concepts

Agrarian societyMediationEconomic JusticePoliticsDispute resolutionPolitical scienceAgrarian systemPolitical economyLand grabbingAgricultureDevelopment economicsLawEconomicsGeographyArchaeologyAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentLand Rights and ReformsAgriculture and Rural Development Research