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ID143937
Title ProperIndia and the dialectics of domestic and international “land grabbing
Other Title Informationhistorical perspectives, current debates, and the case of Ethiopia
LanguageENG
AuthorMichael, Arndt ;  Baumann, Marcel M
Summary / Abstract (Note)International land “acquisition” or land “grabbing” has become a global phenomenon in which India plays an increasingly important role. While there is a critical domestic debate regarding land deals within India — especially pertaining to the provisions of the Land Acquisition Act of 2014 — there is practically no such debate regarding international land deals by Indian companies in Sub-Saharan Africa. By applying a two-level discourse analysis, this article argues that the land discourse within India can be understood as a strategy of exclusion. By linking land issues with questions of “development,” the discursive strategies of powerful actors lead to the exclusion of the arguments of NGOs and others opposed to the land deals from the discourse within India. This strategy of exclusion is then taken to the extreme with the strategy of securitization outside India: land deals are linked to “food security,” as the example of Ethiopia highlights.
`In' analytical NoteIndia Review Vol. 15, No.1; Jan-Mar 2016: p.112-135
Journal SourceIndia Review Vol: 15 No 1
Key WordsIndia ;  Ethiopia ;  Historical perspectives ;  Land Grabbing ;  Dialectics of Domestic and International ;  Current Debates


 
 
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