Consultation and Displacement in Large-Scale Agriculture Investment: Evidence from Oromia Region’s Shashamane Rural District
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Research Methodology and Research Approaches
2.1. Choosing a Research Location
- There has been or is currently an LSAI process.
- The Shalo–Melega LSAI in Ethiopia’s Shashamane area of Oromia experienced low community engagement and application of FIPC.
- Shashamane rural district is perhaps the most known for its higher demographic pressure and land shortage.
- The local and indigenous population primarily engages in smallholder agriculture and natural resource.
2.2. Background Overview Study Area and the Project
2.3. Research Design
2.3.1. Data and Sampling
2.3.2. Data Collection Tools
- A.
- Questionnaire survey
- B.
- In-depth conversations
- C.
- Interviewing key informants
- D.
- Focus Group Conversations (FGDs)
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Conceptual Framework for Analyzing Local People’s Community Participation in LSAI
4. Results
4.1. Stakeholder Consultation and FPIC of Local People in the Shashamane Rural District LSAI
4.2. Direct and Indirect Effects of an LSAI Proposal
“LSAI are causing large-scale displacement and communities are at great risk of mass dispossession today young people have no alternative and we have not enough land to share with them. Migration to the urban area, Shashemena town, Aris Negela, and Addis Ababa out of Ethiopia to Arab countries such as Saudi Arabia, Kenya, and South Africa, is the only alternative to minimize the household pressure, at least they feed themselves and send some money to for family.”(FGD interviewed, D/Calalaqaa kebele, 2020)
4.3. Causal Association between LSAI and Human Health Outcomes, Loss of Crop Production, and Unplanned Human Settlements
“I have faced the constraint of livestock grazing, due to this I have enforced to sell livestock with cheap price or keep in the house without animal fodder and this LSAI also caused a shortage of traditional energy source to obtain from the forests and timber products”.(Resident, interviewed, B/Dannaba 2020)
“Loss of vegetation and vital natural resources due to land clearing, loss of forest products (fuel wood, timber, nontimber forest products) have become high-priced, especially, resource for livestock production remains limited over time to time.”(FGD interviewed, Toga kebele, 2020)
4.4. Enhancement and Mitigation Measures for Settlement Areas
4.5. Tracking Performance and Final Remarks/Comments from the Participants
4.6. Local Community’s Satisfaction with the Overall Project
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
District | Kebeles | Total Population | Proportional to Size (PPS) Systematic Sampling Techniques | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Male | Female | Total Population/HD/ | Proportional to Size (PPS) | ||
Shasamane adjacent district (treatment) | B/Dannaba | 827 | 113 | 940 | (940 × 153)/2098 = 69 |
Toga | 540 | 96 | 636 | (636 × 134)/2098 = 41 | |
D/Calalaqaa | 416 | 105 | 521 | (521 × 134)/2098 = 33 | |
Ground total | 134 |
Appendix B
Please Answer the Following Questions | Frequency | Percentage (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Have you heard any measures taken by the government to monitor and evaluate the performance of LSAI including? | Yes = 1 | 88 | 65.6 |
No = 0 | 46 | 34.3 | |
Willing to return compensation | Yes = 1 | 125 | 93.2 |
No = 0 | 9 | 6.7 |
Appendix C
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Dimension | Variable Name | Variable Type | Unit of Measurement |
---|---|---|---|
Recognition and sense of ownership | Meetings | Dummy | 1, if invited to a stakeholder meeting, 0 if not |
Participation | Dummy | 1, if participating in the proposal, 0 if not | |
Proposal explanation | Dummy | 1, if the proposal is adequately explained to all stakeholders, 0 if not | |
Effects and hazards | Dummy | 1, if the proposal effect and hazards are adequately explained, 0 if not | |
Power and level of influence | Responsibility | Dummy | 1, if the local community is influenced and empowered, 0 if not |
Decisions | Dummy | 1, if the decision of the local community incorporated, 0 if not | |
Degree of community control | Dummy | 1, if higher degree of community control or partnership, 0 if not | |
Key principle of participation | Open and transparent | Dummy | 1, if participation is open and transparent, and understood, 0 if not |
Fair and neutral | Dummy | 1 if, the consultation is fair and neural, 0 if not | |
Inclusive | Dummy | 1, if the proposal is inclusive, 0 if not | |
Relevant | Dummy | 1, if the proposal is, 0 if not | |
Responsive | Dummy | 1, if the proposal is responsive to stakeholder input, 0 if not | |
Credible | Dummy | 1, if the proposal is credible, 0 if otherwise | |
Impact | Direct impact | Dummy | 1, if the proposal is a direct impact, 0 if not |
Displacement from resident | Dummy | 1, if the proposal is to displace you from your residential, 0 if not | |
Displacement from communal land | Dummy | 1, if the displace your from communal land, 0 if not | |
Indirect impact | Dummy | 1, if the proposal is an indirect impact, 0 if not | |
Cultural sites | Dummy | 1, if the proposal is adequately explained, 0 if not | |
Heritage | Dummy | 1, if the proposal is affecting heritage explained, 0 if not | |
Biodiversity | Dummy | 1, if the proposal affects biodiversity, 0 if not | |
Mitigation and compensation | In-kind compensation | Dummy | 1, if in-kind compensation is provided, 0 if otherwise |
Monetary compensation | Dummy | 1, if the monetary compensation is provided, 0 if not | |
Resettlement | Dummy | 1, if compensation is provided resettlement, 0 if otherwise | |
Site remediation | Dummy | 1, if Site remediation is provided, 0 if otherwise | |
Mentoring | Monitoring and follow-up | Dummy | 1, if the monitoring and follow-up are adequate, 0 if not |
Satisfaction | Satisfaction | Rank (4-point scale) | 0 being not at all satisfied, 1 being poor satisfaction, 2 being medium satisfaction, and 3 being very satisfied) |
Consultation and FPIC Component | Frequency | Percentage (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Stakeholder meetings | Yes = 1 | 116 | 86.6 |
No = 0 | 18 | 13.4 | |
Proposal explanation | Yes = 1 | 10 | 7.4 |
No = 0 | 124 | 92.5 | |
Potential effects and hazards | Yes = 1 | 8 | 6 |
No = 0 | 126 | 94 | |
Power through and a sense of social responsibility | Yes = 1 | 4 | 2.1 |
No = 0 | 130 | 97.9 | |
Decisions are made and based | Yes = 1 | 7 | 5.2 |
No = 0 | 127 | 94.8 | |
Voice issues and impact on the decision-making process | Yes = 1 | 3 | 2.2 |
No = 0 | 131 | 97.8 | |
Inclusive—covers all stakeholders | Yes = 1 | 6 | 4.5 |
No = 0 | 128 | 95.5 | |
Open and transparent? | Yes = 1 | 9 | 6.8 |
No = 0 | 125 | 93.2 | |
Fair, neutral, and performed without prejudice | Yes = 1 | 5 | 3.8 |
No = 0 | 129 | 96.2 | |
Responsive to stakeholder requirements and inputs | Yes = 1 | 1 | 0.7 |
No = 0 | 133 | 99.3 | |
Credible—builds confidence and trust | Yes = 1 | 2 | 1.5 |
No = 0 | 132 | 98.5 | |
Gender issue | Yes = 1 | 4 | 2.1 |
No = 0 | 130 | 97.9 |
Effect of LSAI | Frequency | Percentage (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Local and indigenous people are affected by a proposal? | Yes = 1 | 130 | 97.9 |
No = 0 | 4 | 2.1 |
Displacement and Mitigation Measures | Frequency | Percentage (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Displacement from locality | Yes = 1 | 28 | 20.9 |
No = 0 | 106 | 79.1 | |
Displacement from farmland | Yes = 1 | 71 | 52.9 |
No = 0 | 63 | 147.1 | |
Displacement on local grazing land | Yes = 1 | 128 | 95.5 |
No = 0 | 6 | 4.5 | |
Loss of cultural, religious, and historical heritage assets | Yes = 1 | 123 | 91.7 |
No = 0 | 11 | 8.3 | |
Loss of aesthetic resources | Yes = 1 | 116 | 86.5 |
No = 0 | 20 | 13.5 |
Please Answer the Following Questions | Frequency | Percentage (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Communicable diseases such as malaria | Yes = 1 | 101 | 75.4 |
No = 0 | 33 | 24.6 | |
Loss of crops | Yes = 1 | 103 | 76.8 |
No = 0 | 31 | 23.2 | |
Unplanned human settlements | Yes = 1 | 98 | 73.1 |
No = 0 | 36 | 26.8 | |
Conflicts | Yes = 1 | 81 | 60.5 |
No = 0 | 53 | 39.5 |
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Alemu, Y.; Tolossa, D. Consultation and Displacement in Large-Scale Agriculture Investment: Evidence from Oromia Region’s Shashamane Rural District. Land 2022, 11, 1384. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11091384
Alemu Y, Tolossa D. Consultation and Displacement in Large-Scale Agriculture Investment: Evidence from Oromia Region’s Shashamane Rural District. Land. 2022; 11(9):1384. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11091384
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlemu, Yideg, and Degefa Tolossa. 2022. "Consultation and Displacement in Large-Scale Agriculture Investment: Evidence from Oromia Region’s Shashamane Rural District" Land 11, no. 9: 1384. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11091384
APA StyleAlemu, Y., & Tolossa, D. (2022). Consultation and Displacement in Large-Scale Agriculture Investment: Evidence from Oromia Region’s Shashamane Rural District. Land, 11(9), 1384. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11091384