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8 - A Jurisprudential History of the Displacement Crimes Applicable to Corporate Landgrabbing

from Part III - Developing the Available Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2020

Nina H. B. Jørgensen
Affiliation:
University of Southampton
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Summary

This chapter discusses the crime of deportation, casting is as a legal history that will inform upcoming land grabbing cases against businesses, for example before the International Criminal Court. The term ‘land grabbing’ denotes the illegal forcible eviction of local populations in order to make way for mining, logging, agricultural plantations, infrastructure projects, and other commercial ventures. The phenomenon is a widespread and rapidly growing problem globally, often involving the collusion of political leaders, local businesspeople, representatives of multinational enterprises and financial institutions. There is a growing interest in employing international criminal justice as a response to these practices, but land grabbing itself is not an international crime, meaning that prosecutors would likely seek to charge displacement-type offenses for corporate implication in these practices. Therefore, a jurisprudential history of displacement crimes in international criminal law is an important point of departure in assessing the potential and pitfalls of the new weight to be placed on these crimes, either as a basis for expanding international courts’ jurisdiction over atrocities or for addressing some of the underling commercial interests that provide both the means and motivation for them.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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