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Explaining the emergence of land-use frontiers

Authors :
Meyfroidt, Patrick
Abeygunawardane, Dilini
Baumann, Matthias
Bey, Adia
Buchadas, Ana
Chiarella, Cristina
Junquera, Victoria
García, Angela Kronenburg
Kuemmerle, Tobias
de Waroux, Yann le Polain
Oliveira, Eduardo
Picoli, Michelle
Qin, Siyu
García, Virginia Rodriguez
Rufin, Philippe
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Land use expansion is linked to major sustainability concerns including climate change, food security and biodiversity loss. This expansion is largely concentrated in so-called frontiers, defined here as places experiencing marked transformations due to rapid resource exploitation. Understanding the mechanisms shaping these frontiers is crucial for sustainability. Previous work focused mainly on explaining how active frontiers advance, in particular into tropical forests. Comparatively, our understanding of how frontiers emerge in territories considered marginal in terms of agricultural productivity and global market integration remains weak. We synthesize conceptual tools explaining resource and land-use frontiers, including theories of land rent and agglomeration economies, of frontiers as successive waves, spaces of territorialization, friction, and opportunities, anticipation and expectation. We then propose a new theory of frontier emergence, which identifies exogenous pushes, legacies of past waves, and actors anticipations as key mechanisms by which frontiers emerge. Processes of abnormal rent creation and capture and the built-up of agglomeration economies then constitute key mechanisms sustaining active frontiers. Finally, we discuss five implications for the governance of frontiers for sustainability. Our theory focuses on agriculture and deforestation frontiers in the tropics, but can be inspirational for other frontier processes including for extractive resources, such as minerals.

Subjects

Subjects :
Economics - General Economics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2402.12487
Document Type :
Working Paper