Questions about land control have invigorated thinkers in
agrarian studies and economic history since the nineteenth century.
Exclusion, alienation, expropriation, dispossession, and violence
animate histories of land use, property rights, and territories.
More recently, agrarian environments have been transformed by
processes of de-agrarianization, urbanization, migration, and new
forms of primitive accumulation. Even the classic agrarian question
of how the social relations of agriculture will be influenced by
capitalism has been reformulated at critical historical moments,
reviving or producing new debates around the importance of land
control.
The authors in this volume focus on new frontiers of land
control and their active creation. These frontiers are sites where
established power relationships are challenged by new enclosures
and property regimes, producing new social and environmental
dynamics in their stead. Contributors examine labor and production
processes engaged by new configurations of actors, new agrarian and
environmental subjects and the networks connecting them, and new
legal and violent means of challenging established or imminent land
controls. Overall we find that land control still matters, though
in changed degrees and manners. Land control will continue to
inspire struggles for a long time.
This book was originally published as a special issue of the
Journal of Peasant Studies.
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