The Sahel is the dry savanna area south of the Sahara desert. The countries along this zone have been in a political and security crisis for the last decades with increased levels of violence. Through various processes of land-use change during the last few decades, smallholders in the Sahel (pastoralists and farmers) have lost access to farmland and important grazing areas. Funded by the European Research Council, the LANDRESPONSE project investigates the relationship between such processes of land dispossession and both migration and the recruitment to armed groups. Will smallholders who lose access to land resist (violently) or migrate? Why are some more prone to resist violently while others are not? The project mainly uses qualitative methods to generate new knowledge on the interactions between land governance, violent conflicts, and migration. In general, we find that smallscale farmers and pastoralists who are dispossessed of land and natural resources join armed groups in large numbers. We also find that dispossession may spark migration in various ways both to urban areas, to other rural areas and to other countries. At the current stage of the research, land dispossession practices can be considered to cause mobilities within the countries and outside. In both migration and conflict studies, land dispossession is a neglected topic, especially related to the Sahel and in Africa in general. In this way, By focusing on land dispossession as an independent variable, Landresponse will contribute to new knowledge by opening and new field of research.