<p>This article provides an analysis of the African palm cluster in the upper region of Los Rios province, and is an emblematic case that reveals the current condition of the power exerted by agro-business in Ecuador. As the analysis of the various actors of the cluster demonstrates, this sector has relied on strong state support, as a result of coalitions between State and a handful of big companies that concentrate the sector’s income and result in the violation of peasant and small producers Human Rights. This process, apparently, hides the historical discrimination towards this constituency and perpetuates historical disadvantages and social debts in our society.</p
While the peasant populations of the Ecuadorian Sierra have been marked by multiple constraints in t...
Coinciding with the 21st century rush to appropriate land, agrarian studies have increasingly examin...
This article analyses major changes that have taken place in a territory where land reform was carri...
This article provides an analysis of the African palm cluster in the upper region of Los Rios provin...
In 1994, with the Law on Agrarian Development, the Ecuadorian State authorized 127,279.28 hectares o...
The cultivation of the African Palm illustrates one of the clearest worldwide tendencies of change i...
The development of large plantations of African oil palms in Ecuador\u27s Amazonian province of Napo...
Agroecology in Ecuador has developed from its early stages as a little-known, incoherent response to...
El artículo ofrece una visión de conjunto del sector agrario ecuatoriano. Incorpora, por una parte, ...
Ecuador is the second largest producer in Latin America of crude palm oil and is the seventh largest...
International audienceWhile the peasant populations of the Ecuadorian Sierra have been marked by mul...
This article examines why peasant communities in South West Cameroon have contested a U.S.-based com...
Agroindustrial organizations have become one of the most important productive bets for Latin America...
Between 1993 and 2015 the land planted to oil palm in Colombia increased fourfold, from 119,000ha to...
Unidad de excelencia María de Maeztu MdM-2015-0552Over the last two decades, the expansion of oil pa...
While the peasant populations of the Ecuadorian Sierra have been marked by multiple constraints in t...
Coinciding with the 21st century rush to appropriate land, agrarian studies have increasingly examin...
This article analyses major changes that have taken place in a territory where land reform was carri...
This article provides an analysis of the African palm cluster in the upper region of Los Rios provin...
In 1994, with the Law on Agrarian Development, the Ecuadorian State authorized 127,279.28 hectares o...
The cultivation of the African Palm illustrates one of the clearest worldwide tendencies of change i...
The development of large plantations of African oil palms in Ecuador\u27s Amazonian province of Napo...
Agroecology in Ecuador has developed from its early stages as a little-known, incoherent response to...
El artículo ofrece una visión de conjunto del sector agrario ecuatoriano. Incorpora, por una parte, ...
Ecuador is the second largest producer in Latin America of crude palm oil and is the seventh largest...
International audienceWhile the peasant populations of the Ecuadorian Sierra have been marked by mul...
This article examines why peasant communities in South West Cameroon have contested a U.S.-based com...
Agroindustrial organizations have become one of the most important productive bets for Latin America...
Between 1993 and 2015 the land planted to oil palm in Colombia increased fourfold, from 119,000ha to...
Unidad de excelencia María de Maeztu MdM-2015-0552Over the last two decades, the expansion of oil pa...
While the peasant populations of the Ecuadorian Sierra have been marked by multiple constraints in t...
Coinciding with the 21st century rush to appropriate land, agrarian studies have increasingly examin...
This article analyses major changes that have taken place in a territory where land reform was carri...