User:Erel Segal/Land reform by country

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The color in the "Year" column is darker for earlier periods and brighter for later periods.

Place Reformer Year Ideology / motivations Actions Outcomes
MiddleEast: Egypt Joseph −1500 Monarchism / strengthen the Pharaoh Nationalization / Joseph bought all lands for Pharaoh Success: Egyptian peasants became serfs of Pharaoh
MiddleEast: Egypt Bakenranef −720 Help the peasants Freedom to peasants / land alienability / debt anullment Failure: Bakenranef murdered, reforms undone
Europe: Greece / Athens Solon −575 Help the poor and prevent an uprising Freedom to peasants / debt anullment / forbid slavery of Athenians Mixed: poverty somewhat alleviated
Europe: Greece / Athens Peisistratos −560 Help the poor while strengthening the tyrant Land redistribution from rich to poor Success: Athenian aristocracy weakened, poverty somewhat reduced
Europe: Greece / Sparta Agis IV and Cleomenes III −244– −227 Help the poor while strengthening the army Land redistribution / debt anullment Failure: Reformer kings murdered by opponents, reforms undone
Europe: Italy / Rome Gracchi brothers −133– −121 Help the landless soldiers Land redistribution / enforcement of land ceiling law Failure: Reformer tribunes murdered by Senate, reforms undone
Europe: France / Savoy Victor Amadeus II 1720–1793 Economics / Increase royal income and weaken the nobility Freedom to peasants / abolish serfdom duties / confiscate lands from lords Success: all estates were at least partially emancipated
Europe: Prussia various 1763–1850 Economics / Modernize the state by improving the peasants' conditions Freedom to peasants from serfdom duties / enable serfs to become free landlords Mixed: nobles bought much more land than peasants
Europe: Italy / Sicily various 1773–1865 Enlightment / Liberate the peasants and strengthen the king Nationalize noble lands; Reduce duties of peasants to landlords; Abolish private landlord armies; Distribute common lands to poor peasants. Failure: The rich bought most lands and became richer; the Sicilian Mafia was born.
Europe: Austria / Habsburg monarchy Maria Theresa and Joseph II 1680–1790 Enlightment / Liberate peasants, increase tax revenues Freedom to peasants from serfdom duties Failure: nobles did not cooperate and laws were not enforced
Europe: Austria / Austrian empire Constitutent Assembly 1849 Enlightment / Liberate peasants Freedom to peasants; subsidized purchase of their lands Mixed: feudal law abolished, but most land remained concentrated with the nobles
Europe: Russia / Russian empire Alexander II 1861 Enlightment / Liberate peasants Freedom to peasants; subsidized purchase of their lands Mixed: More than 23 million people received their liberty, but many of them received land insufficient for survival and became proletariat
Europe: Russia / Russian empire Stolypin 1906–1916 Economics / Encourage private property and capitalism Liquidize communal villages and divide lands to individual peasants. Mixed: Private land holdings increased, but reforms were reversed after Soviet revolution
Europe: Russia / Soviet union Lenin 1917 Communism / Abolish private property Private ownership of land was prohibited Mixed: Private land holdings increased, but reforms were reversed after Soviet revolution
Europe: Russia / Russian Federation Gorbachev, Yeltsin and Putin 1989–2001 Privatization / Allow private property Private ownership of land was re-allowed in several stages Success: Private ownership is gradually increasing
Europe: Albania / Albania Post-WW2 government 1946 Social justice Constitution declared that land belonged to the tiller and disallowed large estates Success: By 1954, more than 90% of land was held in small and mid-sized farms.
Europe: Albania / Albania Communist government 1958–1962 Communism / Collectivization drive Most agricultural lands were shifted to Soviet-style collective and state farms. Success: By 1971, independent family farms had virtually disappeared
Europe: Albania / Albania Post-communist government 1991 Privatization / re-allow private property Arable land held in cooperatives and state farms was equally distributed among all rural households. Success: Land was privatized.
SouthAmerica: Mexico Miguel Lerdo, Porfirio Díaz 1856–1910 Liberalism and economics Forced sale of corporately held property, specifically lands held by the Roman Catholic Church in Mexico and indigenous communities. Mixed: Changed the nature of land tenure in Mexico. But, Most Indian land was acquired by large estates. 95% of villages lost their lands.
SouthAmerica: Mexico (after revolution) Álvaro Obregón, Lázaro Cárdenas 1910–1940 Social justice Allocate land to peasants in need of it Success: Reversed the process of land concentration, reduced the power and legitimacy of the landlord class. Much land was allocated to peasants, agricultural production increased.
Asia: Philippines various 1946–2014 Social justice Land redistribution laws Mixed: Some lands were distributed to landless peasants, but agricultural production suffered.
Asia: Taiwan various 1950s Modernization / community development Success: The JCRR is credited with laying the agricultural basis for Taiwan's outstanding economic growth in the following decades
MiddleEast: Egypt Nasser 1952–1961 Social justice Land redistribution Mixed: 15% of arable land redistributed; reforms undone after change of government
Asia: Vietnam / North Hồ Chí Minh 1953–1956 Communism / break the power of the traditional village elite and redistribute the wealth to create a new class that has no ownership Landlords were murdered by government and their land redistributed to peasants Failure: Hunderds of thousands were killed, and 1 million people fled to the South
Asia: Vietnam / South Nguyen Van Thieu 1970 Social welfare / gain support from rural population during the Vietnam war. Land ceiling, land redistribution with compensation to previous landlords Mixed: Land was redistributed, but law became meaningless 5 years later at the fall of Saigon.
SouthAmerica: Guatemala Juan José Arévalo and Jacobo Arbenz 1953–1954 Social justice Expropriation of land and redistribution to peasants Mixed: The reform itself was successful, but a later US-backed coup reversed it entirely.
SouthAmerica: Cuba Che Guevara 1959–1963 Communism Nationalization of large estates and redistribution to peasants / land ceiling Mixed: peasants were given land rights, but these rights are constrained by government production quotas and a prohibition of real estate transactions
Asia: India various 1961– Economics / modernize the agriculture and end the exploitation of the poor Abolition of rent-collectors; Secure land-tenure; Land ceiling; Consolidate disparate holdings. Mixed: In parts of India redistribution of land became more equitable; in other parts, people found loopholes in ceiling laws.
SouthAmerica: Bolivia Víctor Paz Estenssoro, Evo Morales 1953–2006 Social justice abolish forced peasantry labor, distribute rural property of traditional landlords to Indian peasants, organize peasants into armed militias. Success: By 1970, 45% of peasant families had received title to land. The reform goes on.
SouthAmerica: Chile Jorge Alessandri 1962–1973 Communism Nationalization of large estates and redistribution to peasants Mixed: After the 1973 coup the process was halted and somewhat reversed by market forces
Africa: Ethiopia various 1975 Social justice Nationalization of large estates and redistribution to peasants / abolish tenancy Success: end of feudal law, strengthening of peasants
Oceania: Australia various 1976–2004 Historic justice to Indigenous Australians Several laws giving land rights to Aboriginals Success: Large lands have been returned to Aboriginals
SouthAmerica: Venezuela Hugo Chávez 2001–2003 Communism Redistribute government and unused private land to campesinos in need Success: 60K families received land title
Europe: Scotland Scottish Parliament 2003 Social justice / Freedom to farmer communities Farmer communities can buy their lands without landlord consent Success: end of feudal law