Sugarcane plantations and the alienation of land from smallholder farmers through out-grower schemes in Busoga Sub-Region in Eastern Uganda
Date
2023-09
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Journal of African Studies
Abstract
Despite wide research on land grabbing in Africa, much of the existing
literature restricts the practice mainly to a situation where land is leased
or sold to outside investors for the production of food and biofuel for
export to the western world. This paper extends the debate further by
examining how local sugarcane companies and individuals in Busoga Region
in Eastern Uganda force smallholder farmers to surrender their land willingly
through the out-grower schemes based on contract farming or private
sugarcane production. Using a qualitative methodology that relied mainly on
interviews of key informants and documentary reviews, the paper analyses
the nature of the contemporary land alienations through contract farming
between plantation agriculturalists and smallholder farmers, and how it
has affected the livelihood of the peasants in the Busoga region especially
when it comes to the production of sugarcane for sale at the expense
of food for local consumption. The findings show that in the areas where
sugarcane production through the out-grower schemes is the dominant
economic activity, land alienation for sugarcane growing is rampant as the
sugar companies and the agro-business farmers lure local peasants who
mainly own land on customary tenure to grow sugarcane at the expense of
producing food crops. The paper concludes that this is a new form of land
grabbing in Uganda.
Description
Keywords
Sugarcane plantation, Sugarcane farmers, Out-growers, Land grabbing, Smallholder farmers, Eastern Uganda
Citation
Ojambo, R. (2023). Sugarcane Plantations and the Alienation of Land from Smallholder Farmers through Out-grower Schemes in Busoga Sub-Region in Eastern Uganda. Contemporary Journal of African Studies, 10(1), 52-79.