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Brazil Wants to Put Land Reform on the Global Agenda PDF Print E-mail
Written by Ivan Richard   
Friday, 11 November 2005

Brazil's Ministry of Agrarian Development believes that the 2nd Conference on Agrarian Reform and Rural Development, scheduled to take place next year in Porto Alegre, capital of the Brazilian southernmost state of Rio Grande do Sul, can reinstate this topic on the international agenda.

"This means reinstating on the international agenda the debate over agrarian reform and rural development as important elements of national development projects, especially in developing countries," observes the general coordinator of the Ministry's Nucleus of Agrarian Studies and Social Development, Caio França.

França also thinks that the conference will provide an opportunity for the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) to regain a leading role in the debate over rural development.

For Rogério Mauro, a member of the national coordination of the Landless Rural Workers' Movement (MST), the international encounter will reinforce the idea that agrarian reform is a contemporary issue.

In his view, the neoliberal model "has not managed to resolve agrarian problems. To the contrary, it has aggravated the situation even more."

Since Wednesday, November 9, the Brazilian committee composed of eight representatives of federal government organs and 21 members of social movements and non-governmental organizations, together with the FAO, has been holding a preparatory meeting to discuss the proposals that Brazil plans to present at next year's conference.

The event, which is taking place in the Ministry of Foreign Relations, in Brasília, ends today.

"We included in the programming a discussion of some recent international experiences, and we also introduced into the seminar the contributions of international experts on the topic," França affirmed.

Agência Brasil
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Comments (2)Add Comment
??????
written by Guest, November 12, 2005

Does Brazil wants to put their failure in land reform as an example to follow in other countries ?
Should we copy Brazil ?
Do you want to spread your own poverty worldwide ?

Then wealth inequality will be similar as in Brazil, the worst after Sierra Leone ?

Come on, dont try to give lessons to the world where you have miserably failed.

No one should copy what you do and have done for the past 50 years and even more ! Total disaster.
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Scotland
written by Guest, November 12, 2005
Greetings

Great idea. Let's go for it. Scotland has the most contentrated landownership in Europe. For those who don't think land reform has much to do with modern and dynamic economies and social well-being then. Wake up. Japan, Taiwan, China are all examples of land reform 1940 and 50s programmes. Far from creating poverty they are the under pinning national reform which has help to stimulate growth both rural and urban growth.
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