Family Farming Knowledge Platform

Agriculture, Land Tenure and International Migration in Rural Guatemala

In this paper, it has been demanded what the effects of migration and remittances are on land tenure, agriculture and forests, based on empirical evidence from four rural communities in Guatemala. The results suggest that remittances improve migrant families' access to agricultural land which – depending on the context – fosters more equitable local land distribution patterns or land concentration by migrant families. Changes in the political economy of the country also combine to stimulate these patterns, while remittances contribute to secure land rights held by migrant households. But even though migrant households are acquiring more land, the trend does not change the traditional pattern of land distribution in the country. Regarding forests, significant changes were not observed in two of the communities, while in one we observed forest decline and in the last, forest recovery. A trend away from reliance on the land for survival results in forest recovery.

Title of publication: Journal of Agrarian Change
Volume: Volume 16
Issue: Issue 1
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Page range: 123–144
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Author: Mariel Aguilar-Støen
Other authors: Matthew Taylor, Edwin Castellanos
Organization: Centre for Development and the Environment – SUM, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Other organizations: Department of Geography and the Environment, University of Denver, Centro de Estudios Ambientales y de Biodiversidad, Universidad del Valle de Guatemala, Guatemala City,
Year: 2014
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Country/ies: Guatemala
Geographical coverage: Latin America and the Caribbean
Type: Journal article
Content language: English
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