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Private agricultural colonization on a Brazilian frontier, 1970–1980
Authors:Wendy Jepson  
Institution:aDepartment of Geography, Texas A&M University, 803B Eller O&M Building, 3147 TAMU, College Station, TX 77843-3147, USA
Abstract:Private colonization is the use of companies and cooperatives to survey, demarcate and occupy land, build infrastructure, open roads, plan urban areas, and provide health services and education. Although state-directed colonization projects are strongly implicated in recent environmental and social changes in the Brazilian Amazon, areas settled by private colonization were larger than state-led settlement. The paper considers this poorly examined aspect of the region's recent settlement history by focusing upon a colonization cooperative and private company that settled smallholders from southern Brazil to eastern Mato Grosso State between 1970 and 1980. The analysis emphasizes how private colonization cooperatives successfully secured land title, setting the stage for subsequent commercial agricultural development. This study rejects prevailing interpretations of private colonization as a tool of authoritarian government in Brazil. Rather, private colonization secured land tenure and organized an economically viable production system in a frontier environment of unpredictable state bureaucracies, high transaction costs, risk, and precarious markets.
Keywords:Brazil  Private colonization  Frontier expansion  Land title  Mato Grosso
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