Journal Article

Control, Dispute, and Concentration of Land During Civil War: Evidence from Colombia

Published on 27 March 2023

How are patterns of armed control and dispute by armed actors related to land concentration, land property rights, and distribution? We argue that armed actors affect land tenure by using different land transfer mechanisms to distribute the land, which reflects the dynamics of control and dispute during civil conflict. We test this argument by studying the case of Urabá, a region in northwestern Colombia, using a mixed-method strategy.

First, using extensive qualitative fieldwork, we find that armed actors systematically applied different land transfer mechanisms in areas where they held control. Armed actors strategically changed from employing one land transfer mechanism to another in relation to the level of dispute, political and economic objectives, and alignment with the state, among others. In our fieldwork, we identify how these land transfer mechanisms led to patterns of territorial control and land tenure structure.

We then analyse an original dataset of rural plot ownership in Urabá, based on official cadastral information, to empirically verify our qualitative findings. We estimate a village-level fixed effects model that shows that disputed territories and those under paramilitary control had larger plots, higher land inequality, and fewer land transfers. In contrast, territories with established control by left-wing insurgents exhibit a small landholder scheme. These results offer important insights into the relationship between civil armed conflict and land and the logic of rebel governance.

Cite this publication

Fortou, J.A. and Johansson, S.L. (2023) 'Control, Dispute, and Concentration of Land During Civil War: Evidence from Colombia', International Interactions, Journal Article, 201-236, DOI: 10.1080/03050629.2023.2186406

Authors

Juan Carlos Muñoz-Mora

Post Doctoral Researcher

Sandra Lillian Johansson
Jose Antonio Fortou

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Partners

In partnership with
Universidad de Los Andes
Supported by
ESRC

Publication details

published by
Routledge
authors
Sandra Lillian Johansson
journal
International Interactions, volume 49, issue 2
doi
10.1080/03050629.2023.2186406
language
English

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Region
Colombia

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