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Land Reform
*** Shopping-Tip: Land Reform
'''Land reform''' (also '''
agrarian reform''' although that can have a broader meaning) is the government-initiated or government-backed redistribution of — i.e. transfer of ownership of (or tenure in) — agricultural land. The term most often refers to transfer from ownership by a relatively small number of wealthy (or
nobility noble) owners with extensive land holdings (e.g.
plantations, large
ranches, or
agribusiness plots) to individual or collective ownership by those who work the land. Such transfer of ownership may be with or without consent or compensation; compensation may vary from token amounts to the full value of the land. The
land value tax is a moderate version of land reform.
This definition is somewhat complicated by the issue of state-owned
collective farming collective farms. In various times and places, ''land reform'' has encompassed the transfer of land from ownership — even
peasant ownership in smallholdings — to government-owned collective farms; it has also, in other times and places, referred to the exact opposite, division of government-owned collective farms into smallholdings.
Agrarian or land reform has been a recurring theme of enormous consequence in world history — see, for example, the history of the Semproninan Law or ''Lex Sempronia agraria'' proposed by
Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus and passed by the
Roman Senate 133 B.C.E., which led to the social and political wars that ended the
Roman Republic.
A historically important source of pressure for land reform has been the accumulation of significant properties by tax-exempt individuals or entities. In the Christian world, this has frequently been true of churches and monastaries. In the Moslem world, land reforms such as that organized in
Spain by
al-Hurr in 718 have transferred property from Muslims to Christians, who were taxable.
In the modern world and in the aftermath of
colonialism and the
Industrial Revolution, land reform has occurred around the world, from the
Mexican revolution (
1917) to
People's Republic of China Communist China to
Bolivia (
1952) to
Zimbabwe and
Namibia. Land reform has been especially popular as part of
decolonization struggles in
Africa and the
Arab world, where it was part of the program for
African socialism and
Arab socialism.
Cuba has seen one of the most complete agrarian reforms in Latin America. Land reform was an important step in achieving economic development in many
Third World countries since the post-
World War II period, especially in the
East Asian Tigers and "Tiger Cubs" nations such as
Republic of China Taiwan,
South Korea, and
Malaysia.
Since
mainland China's economic reforms led by
Deng Xiaoping land reforms have also played a key role in the development of the
People's Republic of China.
Land ownership and tenure
''See main article
Land ownership and tenure.''
The variety of land reform derives from the variety of land ownership and tenure. Among the possibilities are:
* Traditional land tenure, as in the indigenous nations or tribes of
North America in the
Pre-Columbian era.
*
Feudalism Feudal land ownership, through
fiefdoms
*
Life estate, interest in real property that ends at death.
*
Fee tail, hereditary, non-transferable ownership of real property.
*
Fee simple. Under
common law, this is the most complete ownership interest one can have in
real property.
*
Leasehold or
renting rental
* Rights to use a
commons
*
Sharecropping
*
Easements
In addition, there is paid agricultural labor — under which someone works the land in exchange for money, payment in kind, or some combination of the two — and various forms of collective ownership. The latter typically takes the form of membership in a
cooperative, or shares in a
corporation, which owns the land (typically by fee simple or its equivalent, but possibly under other arrangements). There are also various hybrids: in many
communist states, government ownership of most agricultural land has combined in various ways with tenure for farming collectives.
Additionally there are, and have been, well-defined systems where neither land nor the houses people live in are their personal property (''
Statare'', as defined in
Scandinavia).
The peasants or rural agricultural workers who are usually the intended primary beneficiaries of a land reform may be, prior to the reform, members of failing collectives, owners of inadequate small plots of land, paid laborers, sharecroppers,
serfs, even
slavery slaves or effectively enslaved by
debt bondage.
The philosophy behind land reform
Philosophically there are strong arguments to justify land reform: Multiple legal titles to the same land decrease its usefulness, some of the titles may have been obtained through theft (sometimes aided by control of the legal system),
Utilitarianism the greatest good for the most people, a right to
dignity, or a simple belief that justice requires a policy of "land to the tiller". However, many of these arguments conflict with prevailing notions of property rights in most societies and states. Except to
Minarchism minarchists, state facilitation of "willing seller, willing buyer" transactions is relatively unproblematic, but other forms of land reform generally raise questions about a society's conception of rights and of the proper role of government.
These questions include:
* Is private property of any sort legitimate?
* If so, is land ownership legitimate?
* If so, are historic property rights in this particular state and society legitimate?
* Even if property rights are legitimate, do they protect absolutely against expropriation, or do they merely entitle the property owner to partial or complete compensation?
* How should property rights be weighed against rights to life and liberty?
* Who should adjudicate land ownership disputes?
* At what level of government is common land owned?
* What constitutes fair land reform?
Land reform for poverty alleviation and food security
Access to land is a crucial factor in the eradication of
food security food insecurity and rural
poverty. The world's poorest people are usually land-poor; improved access to land provides shelter and food — allowing a household to increase food consumption — and may increase household income if surplus food is produced and sold. [http://www.fao.org/documents/show_cdr.asp?url_file=/docrep/006/j0415T/j0415T00.htm]
Land reform efforts
Latin America
*
Mexico: a certain degree of land reform was introduced, albeit unevenly, as part of the
Mexican Revolution.
Emiliano Zapata was strongly identified with land reform, as are the present-day
Zapatista Army of National Liberation.
*
Brazil: In the
1930s,
Getúlio Vargas reneged on a promised land reform. Strong campaign including
direct action by the
Landless Workers' Movement throughout the
1990s. Current efforts under
Lula da Silva, Brazil's first elected leftwing president, inaugurated
January 1,
2003
*
Guatemala: land reform occurred during the
History of Guatemala#The "Ten Years of Spring" "Ten Years of Spring",
1944–
1954 under the governments of
Juan José Arévalo and
Jacobo Arbenz.
*
Bolivia: The revolution of
1952 was followed by a land reform law, but in 1970 only 45% of peasant families had received title to land.
*
Peru: land reform in the
1950s largely eliminated a centuries-old system of
debt bondage debt peonage. Further land reform occurred after the
1968 coup by
left-wing politics left-wing colonel Juan Velasco Alvarado, and again as part of a
counterterrorism effort against the
Shining Path roughly
1988–
1995, led by
Hernando de Soto (economist) Hernando de Soto and the
Institute for Liberty and Democracy during the early years of the government of
Alberto Fujimori, before the latter's ''auto-
coup''.
*
Cuba: Land reform was among the chief planks of the revolutionary platform of
1959. Almost all large holdings were seized by the National Institute for Land Reform (INRA), which dealt with all areas of agricultural policy. A ceiling of 166 acres (67 hectares) was established, and tenants were given full ownership rights.
*
Chile: Attempts at land reform began under the government of
Jorge Alessandri in
1960, were accelerated during the government of
Eduardo Frei Montalva (
1964-
1970), and reached its climax during the
1970-
1973 presidency of
Salvador Allende. Farms of more than 198 acres (80 hectares) were expropriated. After the
Chilean coup of 1973 1973 coup the process was halted, and up to a point reversed by the market forces.
*
Colombia:
Alfonso López Pumarejo (
1934-
1938) passed the Law 200 of
1936, which allowed for the expropriation of private properties, in order to promote "social interest". Later attempts declined, until the
History of Colombia#The National Front National Front presidencies of
Alberto Lleras Camargo (
1958-
1962) and
Carlos Lleras Restrepo (
1966-
1970), which respectively created the Colombian Institute for Agrarian Reform (INCORA) and further developed land entitlement. In 1968 and 1969 alone, the INCORA issued more than 60,000 land titles to farmers and workers. Despite this, the process was then halted and the situation began to reverse itself, as the subsequent violent actions of drug lords, paramilitaries, guerrillas and opportunistic large landowners severely contributed to a renewed concentration of land and to the displacement of small landowners. In the early 21st century, tentative government plans to use the land legally expropriated from drug lords and/or the properties given back by demobilized paramilitary groups have not caused much practical improvement yet.
*
Venezuela:
Hugo Chávez's government enacted
Plan Zamora to redistribute government and unused private land to ''campesinos'' in need.
Middle East
''Land reform is discussed in the article on
Arab Socialism''
*
Egyptian land reform Egypt: (1952, largely reversed since)
*
Syria (1963, largely reversed since)
*
Iran: a significant land reform was part of
Muhammad Reza Shah's so-called
White Revolution of
1963. Almost 90% of Iranian
sharecropping share-croppers became land owners.
*
Iraq (1970)
Europe
*
Finland: In
1918, Finland fought a
Finnish Civil War civil war resulting in a series of land reforms.
*
France: a major and lasting land reform took place under the
French Directory Directory during the latter phases of the
French Revolution.
*
Estonia and
Latvia: at their founding as states in
1918–
1919, they expropriate the large estates of
Baltic German landowners, much of which became smallholdings.
*
Hungary: In 1945 every estate bigger than 142 acres was expropriated without compensation and distributed among the peasants. In the 1950s collective ownership was introduced according to the Soviet model, but after 1990 co-ops were dissolved and the land was redistributed among private smallholders.
*
Ireland: after the
Irish Famine, land reform became the dominant issue in Ireland, where almost all of the land was owned by the
England English aristocracy. The
Irish Parliamentary Party campaigned for this in a largely indifferent
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland British House of Commons. Reform began tentatively in 1870 and continued for fifty years.
*
Poland: there have been several land reforms in Poland. The most important include
Land reforms in the Second Polish Republic Land reforms in the
Second Polish Republic (1919, 1921, 1923, 1925 and 1928) and
Land reform in the People's Republic of Poland Land reform (1944) in the
People's Republic of Poland.
*
Romania: After failed attempts at land reform by
Mihail Kogalniceanu in the years immediately after Romanian unification in
1863, a major land reform finally occurred in 1921.
*
Russia
**
Imperial Russia:
Stolypin reform
**
Soviet Russia:
Decree on Land
*
Scotland the
Land Reform Act (Scotland) was passed in
2003, it ends the historic legacy of
feudal law and creates a framework for rural or
Croft (land) croft communities right to buy land in their area.
*
Sweden, almost non-violently, arrived at regulating the length minimum of
tenant farming contracts at 25 years.
North Africa
*
Egypt: Initially,
Egyptian land reform essentially abolished the political influence of major land owners. However, land reform only resulted in the redistribution of about 15% of Egypt's land under cultivation, and by the early 1980s, the effects of land reform in Egypt drew to a halt as the population of Egypt moved away from agriculture. The Egyptian land reform laws were greatly curtailed under
Anwar Sadat and eventually abolished.
Sub-Saharan Africa
*
Namibia: A limited land reform has been a hallmark of the regime of
Sam Nujoma; legislation passed in September 1994, with a "willing seller, willing buyer" approach.
*
South Africa: Land reform was one of the promises made by the
African National Congress when it came to power in South Africa in
1994. Initially, the system was based on fair price system: land was bought from its owners (willing seller) by the government (willing buyer) and redistributed. However, as of early 2006, the
African National Congress ANC government announced that it will start to make use of
expropriation in the process, although according to the country's chief land-claims commissioner, Tozi Gwanya, unlike Zimbabwe there will be compensation to those whose land is expropriated, "but it must be a just amount, not inflated sums." [http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=263484&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__national/]
*
Zimbabwe: Very controversial efforts at
land reform in Zimbabwe under
Robert Mugabe has moved steadily from a "willing seller, willing buyer" approach toward outright expropriation, often for the benefit of people close to the government.
North America
*
Canada: A land reform was carried out as part of
Prince Edward Island's agreement to join the
Canadian confederation in the
1870s. Most of the land was owned by
absentee landlords in England, and as part of the deal Canada was to buy all the land and give them to the farmers.
Asia
*
China has been through a series of land reforms:
** The thorough land reform launched by the
Communist Party of China in
1946, three years before the foundation of the
People's Republic of China (PRC), won the party millions of supporters among the poor and middle peasantry. The land and other property of landlords were expropriated and redistributed so that each household in a rural village would have a comparable holding. This agrarian revolution was made famous in the West by William Hinton's book ''Fanshen''.
**In the mid-
1950s, a second land reform compelled individual farmers to join collectives, which, in turn, were grouped into People's Communes with centrally controlled property rights and an egalitarian principle of distribution. This policy was generally a failure in terms of production. [http://www.fao.org/sd/LTdirect/LTan0031.htm] There is evidence that the PRC began to reverse this policy even in the
1960s.
** A third land reform beginning in the late
1970s re-introduced family-based contract system called the
household responsibility system, which had enormous initial success, followed by a period of relative stagnation. Chen, Wang, and Davis [1998] suggest that the later stagnation was due, in part, to a system of periodic redistribution that encouraged over-exploitation rather than capital investment in future productivity. [http://www.fao.org/sd/LTdirect/LTan0031.htm]
*
India: Due the taxation and regulation under the
British Raj, at the time of
Indian independence independence, India inherited a semi-feudal agrarian system, with ownership of land concentrated with a few individual landlords (
Zamindars, Zamindari System). Since independence, there has been voluntary and state initiated/mediated land reforms in several states. The most notable and successful example of land reforms is in the state of
West Bengal. After promising land reforms and elected to power, the
Communist Party of India kept their word and initiated gradual land reforms. The result was a more equitable distribution of land among the landless farmers. This has ensured an almost life long loyalty from the farmers and the communists have been in power ever since.
**However, this success was not replicated in other areas like
Kerala - the only other state where communists came to power - and the states of
Andhra Pradesh Andhra and
Madhya Pradesh, where the more radical wing of the CPI, the PWG (People's War Group) or
Naxalites resorted to violence as it failed to secure power. Even in
West Bengal, the economy suffered for a long time as a result of the communist economic policies that did little to encourage heavy industries. In the state of
Bihar, tensions between land owners militia, villagers and
Maoists have resulted in numerous massacres.
**All in all, land reforms have been successful only in pockets of the country, as people have often found loopholes in the laws setting limits on the maximum area of land held by any one person.
*
Japan: After
World War II, the U.S. occupying forces conducted a land reform in Japan.
*
Taiwan: In the years after
World War II,
Chiang Kai-shek conducted land reform at the insistence of the U.S. This course of action was made possible, in part, by the fact that many of the large landowners were Japanese who had fled and also by the fact that the
Kuomintang were mostly from the mainland and had few ties to the remaining indigenous landowners.
*
Vietnam: In the years after World War II, even before the formal division of Vietnam, generally successful and popular land reform boosted the popularity of
North Vietnamese leader
Ho Chi Minh, especially when contrasted with attempts at land reform in
South Vietnam under
Ngo Dinh Diem. South Vietnam made several further attempts in the post-Diem years, the most ambitious being the
Land to the Tiller (South Vietnam) Land to the Tiller program instituted in 1970 by President
Nguyen Van Thieu. This limited individuals to 15 hectares, compensated the owners of expropriated tracts, and extended legal title to peasants who in areas under control of the South Vietnamese government to whom had land had previously been distributed by the
Viet Cong. Mark Moyar [1996] asserts that while it was effectively implemented only in some parts of the country, "In the Mekong Delta and the provinces around Saigon, the program worked extremely well... It reduced the percentage of total cropland cultivated by tenants from sixty percent to ten percent in three years." [http://www.vietnam.ttu.edu/vietnamcenter/events/1996_Symposium/96papers/moyar.htm]
*
South Korea: In 1945–1950, United States and South Korean authorities carried out a land reform that retained the institution of private property. They confiscated and redistributed all land held by the Japanese colonial government, Japanese companies, and individual Japanese colonists. The Korean government carried out a reform whereby Koreans with large landholdings were obliged to divest most of their land. A new class of independent, family proprietors was created. [http://countrystudies.us/south-korea/36.htm]
See also
*
Anti-globalization movement
*
Communism
*
Eminent domain
*
Homestead principle
*
Land value tax
*
Land rights
*
Restitution
*
Squatter
Contrast:
*
Inclosure
External links
-
Land Research Action Network:News, Analysis, and Research on Land Reform
-
Land Reform in Scotland
-
Fast Track Land Reform in Zimbabwe
-
The Land Reform of 1919–1940: Lithuania and the Countries of East and Central Europe
-
FAO Multilingual Thesaurus on Land Tenure
-
FAO International Conference on Agrarian Reform and Rural Development (ICARRD), March 2006
-
Civil Society conference "Land, Territory and Dignity", March 2006
References
* Fu Chen, Liming Wang and John Davis, [http://www.fao.org/sd/LTdirect/LTan0031.htm "Land reform in rural China since the mid-1980s"], [http://www.fao.org/sd/LTdirect/LR98_2/landrf.htm Land Reform 1998/2], a publication of the Sustainable Development Department of the
United Nations'
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
*
William H. Hinton. ''Fanshen: A documentary of revolution in a Chinese village''. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1966. ISBN 0-520-21040-9.
*Mark Moyar, [http://www.vietnam.ttu.edu/vietnamcenter/events/1996_Symposium/96papers/moyar.htm "Villager attitudes during the final decade of the Vietnam War"]. Presented at 1996 Vietnam Symposium [http://www.vietnam.ttu.edu/vietnamcenter/events/1996_Symposium/96papers/papers.htm "After the Cold War: Reassessing Vietnam"].
-
Summary of "Efficiency and wellbeing for 80 years" by Tarmo Luoma on site of ''TEHO'' magazine.
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land reform
*** Shopping-Tip: Land Reform