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Concentración parcelaria

Joining small plots of land together to form larger farms or large fields.

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Publicación revisada por pares
Abril 2019
Indonesia

Indonesia is the fourth most populated country in the world with an annual population growth rate of 1.3%. This growth is accompanied by an increase in sugar consumption, which is occurring at an annual rate of 4.3%. The huge demand for sugar has created a large gap between sugar production and demand. Indonesia became the world’s largest sugar importer in 2017–2018.

Documentos de conferencias e informes
Marzo 2019
Europa oriental
Europa occidental

Most countries in Western Europe have a long tradition for implementing land consolidation projects. In Central and Eastern Europe, land reforms from 1990 on in most countries resulted in farm structures characterized by excessive land fragmentation and small average farm sizes. Most CEE countries have introduced land consolidation instruments to address the structural problems.

Synthesis of agricultural land system change in China over the past 40 years
Publicación revisada por pares
Febrero 2019
China

In summary, China presents a particularly intriguing case for the study of land system dynamics with its spatial patterns of cropland and crops, crop structure and diversity, land transfer and consolidation, and land use intensity changes against the backdrop of its rapid socio-economic transformation, globalization, and environmental challenges.

FAO Support to Land Consolidation in Europe and Central Asia During 2002-2018 cover image
Publicación revisada por pares
Febrero 2019
Asia central
Chipre
Turquía
Europa
Grecia
España

Shortly after the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) was founded in 1945, the organization had started to support member countries addressing structural problems in agriculture with land fragmentation and small holding and farm sizes through the development of land consolidation instruments (Binns, 1950).

Farm Restructuring in Uzbekistan: How Did It Go and What is Next?
Informes e investigaciones
Enero 2019
Uzbekistán

In January 2019, Uzbekistan started a new farm restructuring1. It is said to seek to optimize the use of farmland by increasing the size of farms producing wheat and cotton, reallocating land to more efficient farmers and even clusters, and improving crop rotation options. This is not the first time that this kind of farm restructuring in Uzbekistan takes place.

Publicación revisada por pares
Diciembre 2018
Global

The Gully Land Consolidation Project (GLCP) was launched to create more arable land by excavating soil from the slopes on both sides of gullies, combined with simultaneous comprehensive gully prevention and control measures. The purpose of the GLCP is to increase crop production and reduce soil erosion to achieve ecological and agricultural sustainability.

Documentos de conferencias e informes
Diciembre 2018
Polonia
Letonia

Land consolidation and land exchange are two important measures that can be used to improve the spatial structure of farm holdings. Unfortunately, land cannot be consolidated and exchanged in all villages of a given area simultaneously, due to economic, technical, and social considerations.

Documentos de conferencias e informes
Diciembre 2018
Polonia
Letonia

Soil quality is one of the most important factors determining the potential for obtaining a high profit from farming. The agricultural quality of soils is described by soil quality classes, and the suitability of soils for growing particular plants or plant communities is described in terms of soil-agricultural complexes.

Documentos de conferencias e informes
Diciembre 2018
Polonia
Letonia

The current state of agricultural production space is the outcome of centuries of human activity, as conditioned by socio-economic, legal, and political factors.

Documentos de conferencias e informes
Diciembre 2018
Polonia
Letonia

The spatial structure of rural areas in eastern Poland is characterized by large fragmentation of privately owned farmland, as well as the scattering of parcels across villages and beyond their boundaries. An important defect is also the unfavourable shape of land parcels, which hampers and sometimes even makes impossible rational management of land in a given area.

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