Land Grabbing in Sub Saharan Africa. A Human Rights Framework to address State and Extraterritorial Obligations: The case of China in the D. R. of the Congo

<p>The size and duration of land grabs in Sub Saharan Africa are of dimensions never seen before. This work aims at using human rights as a tool to address the impact of land grabbing on local livelihoods. Findings suggest that land grabs serve the interests of investing governments entailing...

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Main Author: Ute Reisinger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Deusto 2017-12-01
Series:Deusto Journal of Human Rights
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revista-derechoshumanos.revistas.deusto.es/article/view/1004
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spelling doaj-58a28af6c0574aa2912b17df4a7c65332020-11-24T21:28:02ZengUniversity of DeustoDeusto Journal of Human Rights2530-42752603-60022017-12-0101012313410.18543/aahdh-0-2012pp123-134933Land Grabbing in Sub Saharan Africa. A Human Rights Framework to address State and Extraterritorial Obligations: The case of China in the D. R. of the CongoUte Reisinger<p>The size and duration of land grabs in Sub Saharan Africa are of dimensions never seen before. This work aims at using human rights as a tool to address the impact of land grabbing on local livelihoods. Findings suggest that land grabs serve the interests of investing governments entailing direct or indirect state involvement. In the majority of cases investments are characterised by a lack of transparency and participation of local populations. Land grabs cause loss of access to land and resources leaving people unable to feed themselves. At the same time those affected have no voice to demand justice. This article explores the obligations of host states under economic, social and cultural rights and examines extraterritorial obligations of investing states. The findings are applied to a case study of a Chinese investment in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The author argues that a human rights approach does not leave space for land grabs.</p><p><strong>Published online</strong>: 11 December 2017</p>http://revista-derechoshumanos.revistas.deusto.es/article/view/1004land grabbinghuman rightsfood securityextraterritorial obligationsChinaDemocratic Republic of Congo
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ute Reisinger
spellingShingle Ute Reisinger
Land Grabbing in Sub Saharan Africa. A Human Rights Framework to address State and Extraterritorial Obligations: The case of China in the D. R. of the Congo
Deusto Journal of Human Rights
land grabbing
human rights
food security
extraterritorial obligations
China
Democratic Republic of Congo
author_facet Ute Reisinger
author_sort Ute Reisinger
title Land Grabbing in Sub Saharan Africa. A Human Rights Framework to address State and Extraterritorial Obligations: The case of China in the D. R. of the Congo
title_short Land Grabbing in Sub Saharan Africa. A Human Rights Framework to address State and Extraterritorial Obligations: The case of China in the D. R. of the Congo
title_full Land Grabbing in Sub Saharan Africa. A Human Rights Framework to address State and Extraterritorial Obligations: The case of China in the D. R. of the Congo
title_fullStr Land Grabbing in Sub Saharan Africa. A Human Rights Framework to address State and Extraterritorial Obligations: The case of China in the D. R. of the Congo
title_full_unstemmed Land Grabbing in Sub Saharan Africa. A Human Rights Framework to address State and Extraterritorial Obligations: The case of China in the D. R. of the Congo
title_sort land grabbing in sub saharan africa. a human rights framework to address state and extraterritorial obligations: the case of china in the d. r. of the congo
publisher University of Deusto
series Deusto Journal of Human Rights
issn 2530-4275
2603-6002
publishDate 2017-12-01
description <p>The size and duration of land grabs in Sub Saharan Africa are of dimensions never seen before. This work aims at using human rights as a tool to address the impact of land grabbing on local livelihoods. Findings suggest that land grabs serve the interests of investing governments entailing direct or indirect state involvement. In the majority of cases investments are characterised by a lack of transparency and participation of local populations. Land grabs cause loss of access to land and resources leaving people unable to feed themselves. At the same time those affected have no voice to demand justice. This article explores the obligations of host states under economic, social and cultural rights and examines extraterritorial obligations of investing states. The findings are applied to a case study of a Chinese investment in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The author argues that a human rights approach does not leave space for land grabs.</p><p><strong>Published online</strong>: 11 December 2017</p>
topic land grabbing
human rights
food security
extraterritorial obligations
China
Democratic Republic of Congo
url http://revista-derechoshumanos.revistas.deusto.es/article/view/1004
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