Land Reform during the Period of the Second Spanish Republic (1931-1939)

The One Hundred Flowers of Agrarian Reform (Twentieth Century)
By Ricardo Robledo
English

Land reform, along with the religious, military and territorial organization restructuring, was one of the major structural reforms that the Republican leaders were forced to undertake in the spring of 1931. This article briefly describes some of the views that have questioned—and/or continue to question—the usefulness or necessity of the reform approved in September 1932. Two different points in the implementation of the reform are identified. The first is known as the enlightened reform, and it was characterized by the expropriation of lands to the Grandeza de España (Grandees of Spain), thus allowing the settlement of a few thousand peasants. The second is the reform from below initiated in February 1936, when the Popular Front came to power. The amount of redistributed land over this period was five times greater than it had been over the previous three years. Finally, we describe the speeding up of the reform over the Civil War, now comparable to other European reforms of that time, and the problems related to the confrontation with the communists who were in charge of the policies for the small peasants and to the hostility of anarchists and other political forces.

Keywords

  • Spain
  • Land reform of 1932
  • latifundia
  • agrarian unemployment
  • rural violence
  • collectivization
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