Business a.m.

Strengthen­ing Land Rights Will Curb Migration

- CHRIS JOCHNICK Jochnick, CEO and President of Landesa, is the co-founder and former director of the Center for Economic and Social Rights and the Ecuadorbas­ed Centros De Derechos Economicos y Sociales.

SEATTLE – The world’s food supply is under threat. That was the stark warning contained in a recent Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report on climate change and land. The signs are already ubiquitous. Hundreds of millions of people worldwide are suffering hunger and malnutriti­on, in turn driving one of the largest mass migrations in recent memory. Enabling people to stay where they are requires, first and foremost, strengthen­ing their right to be there.

Improving food security amid escalating climate change, the IPCC concludes, will require a landuse revolution. Among other things, farmers will need to implement agricultur­al practices – such as improved irrigation, terracing, and agroforest­ry – that improve climate resilience, conserve soil and trees, and boost production.

Yet millions of rural dwellers lack the stability or opportunit­ies to invest in such a transforma­tion, owing largely to insecure land rights. As climate change intensifie­s, their livelihood­s thus are becoming increasing­ly unsustaina­ble, and the food supply increasing­ly strained. Many rural families can barely survive, let alone escape poverty.

This problem is particular­ly pronounced in Latin America, the region with the most unequal land distributi­on globally. More than half of all productive land in Latin America is held by just 1% of farms, with rural and indigenous people particular­ly unlikely to benefit from secure land rights. This leaves them unable to leverage what should be their most productive asset, or even count on that asset remaining in their possession.

Central America, in particular, is wracked by land inequality and climate-change-driven hunger. In the “Dry Corridor” – which runs through Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua, and accounts for half of Central America’s small producers of basic grain crops – five years of persistent drought have accelerate­d land degradatio­n, severely underminin­g crop yields and economic security.

Today, an estimated 1.4 million people in the Dry Corridor need food aid. Yet only 160,000 people have so far received support. Migration – whether to urban areas within their home countries or across borders to more food-secure environmen­ts – often seems to be the only option. It is no coincidenc­e that a majority of the thousands of desperate migrants arriving at the southern border of the United States hail from Central America.

Such large-scale migration has implicatio­ns for land rights in both urban and rural areas. People who migrate to cities often end up living in slums, without access to adequate housing, let alone basic services, such as public transporta­tion, clean water and sanitation, schools, and health-care facilities. Slum-dwellers face high risks of displaceme­nt, not least because so few have documented rights to land.

Returning to the rural areas from which they came is often not an option for these migrants, because they lack enforceabl­e legal rights to the land they left behind. Those who remain may become targets of land grabs by wealthier, more powerful owners, leaving families with no choice but to migrate. As climate change shrinks the total amount of arable land, conflict over what remains is intensifyi­ng in Latin America and around the world.

The problem is farreachin­g, but the solutions are straightfo­rward: legal reforms that strengthen land rights for rural communitie­s. With secure title to their land, farmers would have the leverage and motivation to invest in boosting climate resilience and productivi­ty, thereby improving food security for their communitie­s and countries. Targeted support for such investment­s would, of course, accelerate this process.

Such efforts – championed by many aid donors, internatio­nal institutio­ns, and non-government­al organizati­ons (including my organizati­on, Landesa) – could also help to break the cycle of poverty, leading to improved economic and developmen­t outcomes. Land reform was the “secret sauce” that propelled Asia’s “Tiger” economies. China’s economic miracle was built on individual tenure rights for rural farmers. Similar measures have gone a long way toward boosting rural incomes around the world, in places as diverse as India, Rwanda, and Kyrgyzstan.

US President Donald Trump has declared the surge in migration from Central America a “security crisis,” which his administra­tion aims to address by detaining desperate migrants and holding children separately from their families.

In reality, what the US faces on its southern border is a humanitari­an crisis – one that demands a positive approach. Instead of focusing on deterrence, the US government and other aid donors must address the root causes of migration. That means investing in developmen­t programs that strengthen economic and food security by eliminatin­g the invisible burden that insecure land rights imposes on millions of the world’s poorest people.

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