Land grabs in Asia : what role for the law?

Bibliographic Information

Land grabs in Asia : what role for the law?

edited by Connie Carter and Andrew Harding

(Routledge contemporary Asia series, 52)

Routledge, 2015

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Although there is no universally accepted definition of the term "land grabbing", ordinary people whose livelihoods are adversely affected by land grabbing know exactly what it is. It involves the physical capture and control of land and homes, including the usurpation of the power to decide how and when these will be used and for what purposes - with little or no prior consultation or compensation to the displaced communities. This thought-provoking book defines land grabbing, and examines aspects of the land grabs phenomenon in seven Asian countries, researched and written by country-specific legal scholars. The book provides unique perspectives on how and why land grabbing is practised in China, India, Pakistan, Cambodia, Malaysia, Myanmar and Indonesia, and explores the surprising role that law plays in facilitating and legitimizing land grabs in each country. In contrast to most of the literature which law focuses on foreign investors' rights under international law, here the focus is on domestic laws and legal infrastructures. Finding that Asian States need to move beyond existing regimes that govern land to a regime that encourages more equitable land rights allocation and protection of stakeholders' rights, the book urges further research in the nexus between the use of law to facilitate development. Land Grabs in Asia is the first book to explore land grabbing in multiple jurisdictions in Asia. As such, it will appeal to students and scholars of law and development, law and society, and international relations, as well as being essential reading for development policy-makers and government ministers.

Table of Contents

1. Consent not coercion: Rethinking the taking of land for 'development' 2. International law response to land grabbing in Asia 3. How land grabs are made 'constitutional' in China 4. Il-legality with Chinese characteristics: How administrative litigation addresses land grabs in China 5. The legal design of land grabs: Possession and the State in post-conflict Cambodia 6. Indonesia's Land Acquisition Law: towards effective prevention of land grabbing? 7. Winners and losers: Land grabbing for foreign investment in the new Myanmar 8. Peninsular Malaysia's 'customary lands': How does legal paternalism facilitate land grabs? 9. Land grabs in Sabah, Malaysia: Customary rights as legal entitlement for indigenous peoples: Real or illusory? 10. Perspectives on land grabbing in Vietnam 11. Transnational State responsibility for human rights violation resulting from global land grabs

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