Sugar Rush: Land rights and the supply chains of the biggest food and beverage companies

TitleSugar Rush: Land rights and the supply chains of the biggest food and beverage companies
Annotated RecordNot Annotated
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsThorpe J
Secondary TitleOxfam Briefing Note
Pagination1-24
Key themesAgriculturalModernization, Dispossession-grabbing, FDI, MarginalisedPeople
Abstract

This paper sets out how one crop – sugar – has been driving largescale land acquisitions and land conflicts at the expense of small-scale food producers and their families. At least 4m hectares of land have been acquired for sugar production in 100 large-scale land deals since 2000, although given the lack of transparency around such deals, the area is likely to be much greater. In some cases, these acquisitions have been linked to human rights violations, loss of livelihoods, and hunger for small-scale food producers and their families. Major food and beverage companies rarely own land, but they depend on it for the crops they buy, including sugar. These companies must urgently recognize this problem, and take steps to ensure that land rights violations and conflicts are not part of their supply chains.

URLhttps://www.oxfam.org/en/research/sugar-rush
Availability

Available for download

Countries

Global

Document Type

Report