Journal of World-Systems Research (Aug 2015)

New Terra Nullius Narratives and the Gentrification of Africa's "Empty Lands"

  • Charles Geisler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5195/jwsr.2012.484
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 15 – 29

Abstract

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Extraterritorial ownership and control of sub-Saharan African land have a long and troubledhistory. This research investigates a much-studied practice—the recent enclosure of African landand resources—but asks a little-studied question: how are non-Africans reasserting terra nulliusnarratives of the past to justify the present transformation of African landscapes? The answersuggested here lies in a bulwark of de facto terra nullius claims couched in security needs of theglobal North and referenced to the low density of Africa’s rural population, its land and laborunder-utilization, the ambiguity of its land tenure and related low yields, and its “arrested”civilization. De facto terra nullius is neither narrow in scope nor static in application. It isstirring again as a potent justificatory logic for north-south land relations.