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LAND DEVELOPMENT (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   130296


Is the scramble for land in Africa foreclosing a smallholder ag / Jayne, Thomas S; Chapoto, Antony; Sitko, Nicholas; Nkonde, Chewe , Muyanga, Milu , Chamberlin, Jordan   Journal Article
Jayne, Thomas S Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Recent global policy attention to "land grabs" by international investors while very important, has diverted attention away from two other process that may be even more fundamentally affecting Africa's economic development trajectory: (1') the pace of land acquisitions by medium-scale African investors, who non-' control more land than large scale foreign investors in each of the three countries examine in this study (Ghana Kenya, and Zambia); and (ii) the overall impact of land transections on the viability of African governments' agricultural strategies, which for the most part remain predicated on smallholder led development and will require the expansion of cropland by smallholder household in Zambia and Ghana
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2
ID:   189255


Regional economic integration on China’s Inland periphery: the Jilin-Northeast Asia Case / Byun, See-Won   Journal Article
Byun, See-Won Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Why has China’s economic integration with Asia lagged in the northeast despite high expectations since the 1990s? China-centered integration in Asia is best understood at the Chinese subnational level. The interaction of central, local, and international interests under given structural and historical conditions produces distinct provincial trajectories of foreign economic engagement. While central state interests dictate policy choice under authoritarian rule, policy outcomes are shaped through local feedback effects and institutional innovations to manage transnational exchange. The Jilin-Northeast Asia case over the past two decades shows a negative orientation of such dynamics, stemming from a poor alignment of interests, the region’s structural constraints, and a socialist historical legacy. By tracing change and continuity on China’s late-developing, inland periphery, this study points to the subnational dimensions of cross-border integration obscured by conventional international relations scholarship, and presents the other side of China’s coastal success story. China’s ongoing plans for Asian integration are linked to the long-term development of China’s own regions rather than just aspirations abroad.
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