Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:609Hits:20385729Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID192651
Title ProperRewriting the rules of land reform
Other Title Informationcounterinsurgency and the property rights gap in wartime Nicaragua
LanguageENG
AuthorSchwartz, Rachel A
Summary / Abstract (Note)The use of agrarian reform within civil war to diminish insurgent support and violence has been a key topic within conflict scholarship, particularly in rural societies. Yet, this research has largely overlooked the ways in which the dynamics of counterinsurgency itself shapes land reform institutions – the procedures governing redistribution and legalization. Focusing on Nicaragua’s Contra War (1980–1990) and its longer-term effects, this article illustrates how counterinsurgent warfare can prompt state elites to refashion the rules of agrarian reform and titling in ways that ultimately undermine the state’s ability to regulate land tenure. As the perceived threat posed by the Contra insurgency deepened and peasant producers defected to rebels’ side, the highly centralized revolutionary coalition in power implemented alternative rules structuring land provision to recover rural support and preserve incumbent political power. These new rules permitted the individual and provisional titling of unregistered parcels, widening the property rights gap. The case thus illustrates that the obstacles to wartime agrarian reform may not emerge from state weakness or incompetence, but from how strategic wartime imperatives perversely remake the rules of land redistribution and titling.
`In' analytical NoteSmall Wars and Insurgencies Vol. 34, No.6; Sep 2023: p.1154-1179
Journal SourceSmall Wars and Insurgencies Vol: 34 No 6
Key WordsCounterinsurgency ;  Nicaragua ;  Land Reform ;  Civil War


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text