Title
Ideal type theories and concrete cases in land science: A multi-step appraisal of the evolutionary theory of land rights in Madre de Dios, Peru
Date Issued
15 December 2016
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Publisher(s)
Elsevier Ltd.
Abstract
The relationships of regional integration, land tenure and land use have all received substantial previous attention. Nonetheless, existing theoretical frameworks tend to presume ideal types of land tenure in understanding the impacts of regional integration on change in institutions and land use. We therefore evaluate the evolutionary theory of land rights (ETLR) for the case of Madre de Dios, Peru. This is a useful case since tenure for agricultural lands is private individual as the ETLR theorizes, but other characteristics, such as the presence of forest extractivism, depart from the assumptions of the ETLR. We pursue a multi-step analysis of key relationships of the ETLR, focusing particularly on the linkages between highway paving as an indicator of regional integration, titling as a measure of tenure formality, multiple indicators of land market engagement, and land uses with diverse ramifications for ecological sustainability. Findings for the different steps partially support the ETLR for the case of Madre de Dios. Disconfirmation however sometimes occurs due to geographic accidents rather than due to truly contrasting findings. We conclude by discussing the need to identify characteristics of empirical cases that do and do not fit the expectations of theories in order to better evaluate the applicability of theory for analysis and policy.
Start page
9
End page
20
Volume
58
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencias de la Tierra, Ciencias ambientales
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84978864854
Source
Land Use Policy
ISSN of the container
02648377
Sponsor(s)
Financial support for this research came from the National Science Foundation, Human and Social Dynamics Program , Grant # 0527511 , the Coupled Natural and Human Systems Program , Grant # 1114924 , and from the US Agency for International Development, Latin America and Caribbean program in Environment, Cooperative Agreement RLA-A-00-06-00071-00 . Several of the co-authors are coordinators of the socio-economic component of the NSF HSD grant, and they thank the students and other collaborators who contributed to the fieldwork and data entry in Madre de Dios, Peru (Mara Cardenas, Rosmery Chacacanta, Eder Chulla, Wendy Cueva Cueto, Yeni Franco Solano, Mercedes Perales, Rosa Cossio, Aldo Ramirez, and Benjamin Zevallos). For logistical support we thank Gabriel Alarcón.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus