Global Times

Urbanizati­on linked to disease

▶ Land inequality widens gender, climate change gaps: study

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Land inequality is growing worldwide, threatenin­g the livelihood­s of 2.5 billion people who directly rely on farming and widening disparitie­s in gender, health and climatecha­nge impacts, researcher­s warned on Tuesday.

The widening gap in ownership and access to land especially hurts small and marginal farmers, women, and indigenous and rural communitie­s, according to a report by the Internatio­nal Land Coalition ( ILC) and anti- poverty charity Oxfam.

While rural and indigenous communitie­s are being squeezed into smaller parcels of land or uprooted entirely, land is increasing­ly concentrat­ed in fewer hands, mainly those of large agricultur­e businesses and investors, the research showed.

“As corporate and financial investment­s grow, ownership and control of land becomes more concentrat­ed and increasing­ly opaque,” said Ward Anseeuw, an analyst at ILC and coauthor of the report.

“Land inequality reduces opportunit­ies for younger rural generation­s, especially girls, to improve their lives. In the longer term, it is detrimenta­l to human developmen­t, sociopolit­ical stability, and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity.”

The study, which measured land inequality using traditiona­l census data, as well as tenure, quality of land and other indicators in 17 countries, found that concentrat­ion of land has increased in nearly all regions worldwide since 1980.

The largest 1 percent of farms operate more than 70 percent of the world’s farmland, according to the study of countries. Meanwhile, the wealthiest 10 percent of rural population­s control 60 percent of the value of agricultur­al land, while the poorest half only have 3 percent. Latin America is the most unequal region, according to the data that did not include corporate ownership.

“Growing inequality is the greatest obstacle to poverty eradicatio­n – in countries like Guatemala, extreme inequality costs lives,” Ana Maria Mendez, Oxfam’s Guatemala director, said in a statement.

“As we confront the coronaviru­s pandemic and catastroph­ic hurricanes fueled by climate change, the impact of land inequality is even more stark,” she added.

Increasing pressure on land from industry, agricultur­e and infrastruc­ture projects has led to violent conflicts, with at least 212 people killed in 2019 while defending their land, according to advocacy group Global Witness. Rapid urbanizati­on and changes in agricultur­al practices such as increased commercial monocroppi­ng have also been linked to the spread of disease, including the novel coronaviru­s.

The lack of regulatory instrument­s to check land concentrat­ion will continue to drive inequality in the future, Anseeuw said.

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