34 research outputs found
Agents and Implications of Foreign Land Deals in East African Community: The Case of Uganda
Some of the factors that have been attributed to the global increase of Foreign Land Deals (FLDs) include
the three Fs (food, fuel, and finance) crises, among others. However, most of the empirical evidence stems
from the assessment of a broad set of countries. An analysis on the main determinants across host communities
within a country presents specificity and closer reality. This chapter contributes by examining
the community factors that could exert significant influence on determining whether or not a community
receives FLDs in East African Community (EAC), focusing on Uganda. Uganda is an interesting case
to investigate because the country is one of the destinations of FLDs in EAC, apart from Kenya and
Tanzania. Taking it one step further, the chapter investigates the possible implications of FLDs on the
host communities in terms of improvement (or deterioration) on selected community outcome variables:
the quality and services relating to education, road, water, and health facilities
Conceptualizing sustainability and resilience in value chains in times of multiple crises-notes on agri-food chains
Global and regional agri-food value chains feed societies and are an income source for hundreds of millions of farmers around the world. They are also target areas for action to achieve a global sustainability transformation. Agri-food chains are highly vulnerable in the context of multiple crises, including the global environmental crisis, geopolitical fragmentation, armed conflicts and wars, and the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic. Measures to increase chain resilience are widely discussed; however, some such measures contradict sustainability measures. While there has been considerable research on the sustainability and resilience of agri-food chains, few studies have integrated both perspectives or outlined potential synergies and trade-offs. Therefore, this interdisciplinary literature review sketches possible contours for a synthesized research agenda on sustainability and resilience for agri-food chains during multiple crises. We argue that such an agenda should include, amongst others, • a more differentiated and critical perspective on the importance of value chain characteristics and developments (e.g., power structures, capabilities, up- and downgrading, and the borders of chain internalities and externalities) • a more comprehensive perspective that includes global and regional contexts and relations (e.g., whole-chain perspectives that integrate agro-input supply) • an actor-oriented approach that interrogates aspects of inequality, cost-sharing, and the potential benefits of sustainability and resilience for different actors along a value chain (i.e., sustainability and resilience for whom?
