Without Land, What Would a Farmer Do?
Rural farmers depend on land and natural resources for food, income, and their physical well-being. But what happens when national or local governments prevent rural people and communities from farming their land?
All governments have the authority to restrict the use of private land, usually for public interest purposes, such as environmental management or biodiversity conservation. In these cases, the affected individuals should be compensated for their losses even though the land remains theirs. Problems arise when governments routinely restrict the use of private property for ordinary government business or for meeting short-term political ends. With weak rights to their property and insecure tenure arrangements, local people stop investing in their land and natural resources. In many countries, governments restrict the use of private property without consulting the landholders or providing compensation. With courts too expensive to access, poor people have few opportunities for recourse.
How do governments balance the benefits to the national public with the rights of local citizens? Can these national benefits be achieved without restricting rural people’s land use? To find out, watch WRI’s new animated video, “A Farmer in Africa.”
The video addresses one objective of WRI’s land and poverty work: strengthening the rights of rural people over their land and natural resources by limiting government powers to restrict or extinguish private property rights. We work with governments, civil society organizations, development assistance agencies, and other actors to strengthen land and natural resource rights as a path to poverty reduction and sustainable development.
- Learn more about WRI's land tenure work and a related project, Focus on Land in Africa (FOLA).