Land Grabbing and Human Rights: The Involvement of European Corporate and Financial Entities in Land Grabbing outside the European Union
In early research on land grabbing, the initial focus was on foreign companies investing abroad, with a particular focus on those based in countries such as China, Gulf States, South Korea, and India. In recent years, it has become evident that the range of countries land investors originate in is far broader, and includes both North Atlantic - and EU-based actors. In this study, we offer both quantitative and qualitative data illustrating the involvement of EU-based corporate and financial entities in land deals occurring outside of the EU. This study also analyses the global land rush within a human rights framework, examining the implications of particular land deals involving EU-based investors and their impact on communities living in areas where the investments are taking place. The research presented here builds partly on Cotula’s 2014 study on the drivers and human rights implications of land grabbing, but differs in that it focuses explicitly on particular cases of possible, actual or potential human rights abuses and violations, in the context of activities involving European corporate and financial entities. In our conclusions, we offer a series of recommendations on how the EU can more effectively address these issues.
Study
Annex 1
External author
Saturnino M. BORRAS Jr. (International Institute of Social Studies, Netherlands), Philip SEUFERT (FIAN International, Germany), Stephan BACKES (FIAN International, Belgium), Daniel FYFE (FIAN International, Switzerland), Roman HERRE (FIAN Germany, Germany), Laura MICHELE (FIAN International, Germany) and Elyse MILLS (International Institute of Social Studies, Netherlands)
About this document
Publication type
Policy area
Keyword
- AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY AND FISHERIES
- biofuel
- BUSINESS AND COMPETITION
- business ethics
- business organisation
- common commercial policy
- corporate social responsibility
- development policy
- economic policy
- ECONOMICS
- ENERGY
- energy policy
- European construction
- EUROPEAN UNION
- extraterritorial jurisdiction
- farming systems
- FINANCE
- financing and investment
- human rights
- international affairs
- INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
- investment abroad
- land mobility
- LAW
- organisation of the legal system
- rights and freedoms
- self-regulation
- self-sufficiency in food
- social rights
- sources and branches of the law
- the EU's international role
- TRADE
- trade policy