Ten
African countries have signed up to the New Alliance for Food Security
and Nutrition – the G8 countries’ main strategy for supporting
agriculture in Africa that was launched in 2012. As the New Alliance has
been under way for three years, some of its likely impacts are becoming
clearer. This briefing – covering Nigeria, Malawi, Tanzania and Senegal
– shows that some large companies involved in the New Alliance are
already accused of taking part in land grabs in some countries. It also
presents new research to argue that the initiative is further increasing
the risk of rural communities losing their access to and control over
land to large investors, largely through policy commitments on land
titling and land reform. Implicated in these reforms and risks of land
grabs are the G8 donor countries bankrolling the New Alliance and the
European Union. These governments must stop all engagement in and
support for the New Alliance and replace it with genuine initiatives to
support small-scale food producers and advance sustainable agriculture.
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