Land policy reform has dominated the development agenda across the Global South over the past two decades. In contrast with earlier distributive land reforms, contemporary policies reflect an amalgamation of neoliberal, state territorial, and social justice agendas. This paper demonstrates how land policy changes reflect the spatially extensive and multi-scalar politics of land contestation and control, employing the cases of Myanmar and Laos. Myanmar's short-lived democratic transition enabled civil society actors to exert uneven influence on policy reform. In contrast, communist party and state dominance in Laos has constrained, although not wholly obstructed, policy intervention by non-governmental groups
Theoretically questioning what land is and why it gets contentious, this thesis explores land politi...
Landscape Approaches have been proposed as a transferable model of multi-stakeholder governance, yet...
Upland Geopolitics by Michael B. Dwyer aims at updating the debate on state-bulding in Southeast Asi...
Land policy reform has dominated the development agenda across the Global South over the past two de...
State control of land plays a critical role in producing land dispossession throughout the Global So...
This paper examines land use planning processes in Laos, particularly how they are shaped and reshap...
Following the National League for Democracy’s landslide victory in the 2015 national election, Myanm...
During a civil war and its aftermath, rival powerholders frequently engage in decision-making over l...
Since the emergence of the sustainable development paradigm in the late 1980s, land-use planning has...
Since the emergence of the sustainable development paradigm in the late 1980s, land-use planning has...
The intersection between land grabs and climate change mitigation politics in Myanmar has created ne...
As agricultural land has become an increasing target of large-scale, export-oriented bilateral inves...
Land grabbing has transformed rural environments across the global South, generating resistance or p...
Extensive land-use “regime shifts” have been observed as rapid transitions from natural land cover o...
In the twenty-first century, land deals in the Global South have become increasingly prevalent and c...
Theoretically questioning what land is and why it gets contentious, this thesis explores land politi...
Landscape Approaches have been proposed as a transferable model of multi-stakeholder governance, yet...
Upland Geopolitics by Michael B. Dwyer aims at updating the debate on state-bulding in Southeast Asi...
Land policy reform has dominated the development agenda across the Global South over the past two de...
State control of land plays a critical role in producing land dispossession throughout the Global So...
This paper examines land use planning processes in Laos, particularly how they are shaped and reshap...
Following the National League for Democracy’s landslide victory in the 2015 national election, Myanm...
During a civil war and its aftermath, rival powerholders frequently engage in decision-making over l...
Since the emergence of the sustainable development paradigm in the late 1980s, land-use planning has...
Since the emergence of the sustainable development paradigm in the late 1980s, land-use planning has...
The intersection between land grabs and climate change mitigation politics in Myanmar has created ne...
As agricultural land has become an increasing target of large-scale, export-oriented bilateral inves...
Land grabbing has transformed rural environments across the global South, generating resistance or p...
Extensive land-use “regime shifts” have been observed as rapid transitions from natural land cover o...
In the twenty-first century, land deals in the Global South have become increasingly prevalent and c...
Theoretically questioning what land is and why it gets contentious, this thesis explores land politi...
Landscape Approaches have been proposed as a transferable model of multi-stakeholder governance, yet...
Upland Geopolitics by Michael B. Dwyer aims at updating the debate on state-bulding in Southeast Asi...