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Public Property, Law and Society: Owning, Belonging, Connecting in the Public Realm [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 178 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 700 g, 2 Tables, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Dec-2020
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367375982
  • ISBN-13: 9780367375980
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 178 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 700 g, 2 Tables, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Dec-2020
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367375982
  • ISBN-13: 9780367375980
Teised raamatud teemal:

This book examines the almost entirely neglected realm of public property, identifying and describing a number of key organizing principles around which a nascent jurisprudence of public property may be developed.

In property law terms, the public realm is lost to plain view. Despite the vast acreage of public lands, or the extensive tracts of private lands over which public rights subsist, there is little commensurate scholarly discussion of the ideas, theories, practices, and laws of public property. This is no accident. Public property has been marginalized and pushed to the periphery for centuries, a consequence of the dominant discourse of private property, and its enclosing, encroaching tendencies. This book explores the rich diversity of the public estate, of what the public realm means for us, the general public, canvassing what we may ‘own’, where we may ‘belong’, or not, and how we may ‘connect’ through a shared use and enjoyment of public place and space. To better understand public property is to better value its critical public-wealth. Whether overlooked, over-used, or under threat of imminent loss, this book maintains that our loved (and not so loved) public spaces are essential components of our diverse, functioning, and optimistically livable human geographies. As such, they demand legal protection.

This important and original book will be of considerable interest to scholars and others with interests in property and land law, socio-legal studies, legal geography and urban studies.

List of tables
vii
Acknowledgments viii
1 Introduction
1(8)
2 Of public order
9(27)
2.1 Introduction
9(3)
2.2 Scotland -- a rich history of public real rights
12(5)
2.3 US federal public lands -- one-third of a nation, one-half of the West
17(4)
2.4 New Zealand's public outdoors -- predominant purpose, bi-cultural context
21(4)
2.5 England -- the invisible, disappearing public realm?
25(4)
2.6 Conclusions
29(7)
3 Of public owning
36(26)
3.1 Introduction
36(1)
3.2 Public ownership: a rights-based analysis
37(4)
3.3 A spectrum of public ownerships
41(6)
3.4 An a-spatial, non-binary public owning
47(3)
3.5 Contested public ownerships in the colonial settler state
50(3)
3.6 Thinking public ownership differently
53(9)
4 Of sociability, human flourishing, and the well-lived public life
62(18)
4.1 Introduction
62(1)
4.2 Sociability
63(4)
4.3 Propriety and human flourishing
67(3)
4.4 Public happiness
70(2)
4.5 The (im)perfect well-lived life
72(8)
5 Of public belonging
80(56)
5.1 Introduction
80(1)
5.2 Public property and belonging
81(4)
5.3 Public property, place and space
85(2)
5.4 Public property and community
87(5)
5.5 Belonging relationally in public space and place
92(6)
5.6 Conclusion
98(5)
6.1 Introduction
103(1)
6.2 The literary pedestrian, and her normative ways
104(5)
6.3 The theorizing pedestrian
109(7)
6.4 The doctrinal pedestrian
116(10)
6.5 Conclusion: the pedestrian, connection, and public real property
126(10)
7 Of democracy, protest, and the public square
136(22)
7.1 Introduction
136(1)
7.2 The centrality of public things
137(4)
7.3 Free speech, political communication, and the public square
141(5)
7.4 Democracy in public action - of protest and dissent
146(5)
7.5 Conclusion
151(7)
8 Conclusion
158(15)
8.1 The lie of the (public) land
158(3)
8.2 Public property vs. public space
161(2)
8.3 The commons vs. the public
163(1)
8.4 Flow vs. fixity
164(1)
8.5 Public purpose vs. public use
165(2)
8.6 Spatial justice vs. private privilege
167(6)
Index 173
John Page is a Professor of Law at the School of Law and Justice at Southern Cross University, Australia.