4.7 Article

Large-scale agricultural investment in Ethiopia: Development, challenges and policy responses

Journal

LAND USE POLICY
Volume 117, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.landusepol.2022.106091

Keywords

Large-scale agricultural investment; Agricultural development policy; Rural land right; Institutional capacity; Development challenges

Funding

  1. colleges of Social Science and Humanities at Arba Minch University
  2. College of Development Studies at Addis Ababa University

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This paper critically analyzes how rural land issues, large-scale agricultural investment (LSAI), and development challenges are addressed by the agricultural policy in Ethiopia. The study highlights the failure to address rural land rights as a core problem in the policy and emphasizes the importance of reconsidering land tenure security.
In 1991, Ethiopia's development strategy positioned smallholder farmers in a vital role in increasing agricultural productivity that could serve as a growth engine for the overall economic development of the country. However, the incorporation of agricultural commercialization as a development strategy in 2005 brought an influx of largescale agricultural investment (LSAI) in Ethiopia and took away the special role that smallholder farmers had previously played. This paper critically analyzes how rural land issues, LSAI, and development challenges are addressed by the agricultural policy and how gaps of institutional capacity with regards to LSAI in Ethiopia are managed and monitored. This qualitative study uses document analysis, focus group discussions, key informant interviews, and personal observation methods to explore processes, activities, and events found in society; the study relies on Bacchi's (2009) model of policy analysis known as 'What is the Problem Represented to be' (WPR). On the basis of this approach, failure to address 'rural land rights' has been determined as a core problem in the policy, which has resulted in competition for land use rights among smallholder farmers, pointing out the lack of preparedness and inability of the policy and all government institutions to handle socio-economic disruptions related to the expansion and development of LSAI in Ethiopia. Reconsidering constitutional and highly politicized land tenure security will be of paramount importance in bringing about agricultural transformation in Ethiopia.

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