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Alice Beban, " Unwritten Rule: State-Making through Land Reform in Cambodia," (Cornell University Press, 2021)

16 min • 11 november 2024

In 2012, Cambodia-an epicenter of violent land grabbing-announced a bold new initiative to develop land redistribution efforts inside agribusiness concessions. Alice Beban's Unwritten Rule focuses on this land reform to understand the larger nature of democracy in Cambodia. Beban contends that the national land-titling program, the so-called leopard skin land reform, was first and foremost a political campaign orchestrated by the world's longest-serving prime minister, Hun Sen. The reform aimed to secure the loyalty of rural voters, produce "modern" farmers, and wrest control over land distribution from local officials. Through ambiguous legal directives and unwritten rules guiding the allocation of land, the government fostered uncertainty and fear within local communities. Unwritten Rule gives pause both to celebratory claims that land reform will enable land tenure security, and to critical claims that land reform will enmesh rural people more tightly in state bureaucracies and create a fiscally legible landscape. Instead, Beban argues that the extension of formal property rights strengthened the very patronage-based politics that Western development agencies hope to subvert.


  • Cambodia land reform
  • Alice Beban Unwritten Rule
  • land grabbing in Cambodia
  • Hun Sen political strategy
  • Cambodian agribusiness concessions
  • land redistribution Cambodia
  • leopard skin land reform
  • land titling program Cambodia
  • rural voter loyalty Cambodia
  • land tenure security in Cambodia
  • Cambodian democracy analysis
  • property rights and patronage
  • agrarian politics Cambodia
  • land policy Southeast Asia
  • Western development critique
  • East Asian Studies Podcast
  • Southeast Asian Studies Podcast
  • Southeast Asian History
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