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This book explores the discourse of regulatory crisis in the UK and
examines why, despite the increasing contestation of the principles
underpinning the regulatory state, its institutions and practices
continue to be firmly embedded within the governance of the British
state. It considers its implications for our understanding of the
contemporary nature of the British state, and to the study of
regulation which is no longer confined to the domain of low
politics, populated by technocrats, but is scrutinised by elected
politicians, and the subject of the front pages rather than the
financial pages. The author sets the British regulatory tradition
in a wider context, both spatially, in terms of the challenges
presented by Europeanisation, and temporally, critically analysing
the process of crisis construction in the narratives of
neoliberalism and participatory democracy in the contemporary era.
This book re-considers property law for a future of environmental
disruption. As slogans such as "build the wall" or "stop the boats"
affect public policy, there are counter-questions as to whether
positivist or statist notions of property are fit for purpose in a
time of human mobility and environmental disruption. State-centric
property laws construct legal fictions of sovereign control over
land, notwithstanding the persistent reality of informal
settlements in many parts of the Global South. In a world affected
by catastrophic disasters, this book develops a vision of adaptive
governance for property in land based on a critical re-assessment
of state-centric property law. This book will appeal to a broad
readership with interests in legal theory, property law, adaptive
governance, international development, refugee studies,
postcolonial studies, and natural disasters.
This book re-considers property law for a future of environmental
disruption. As slogans such as "build the wall" or "stop the boats"
affect public policy, there are counter-questions as to whether
positivist or statist notions of property are fit for purpose in a
time of human mobility and environmental disruption. State-centric
property laws construct legal fictions of sovereign control over
land, notwithstanding the persistent reality of informal
settlements in many parts of the Global South. In a world affected
by catastrophic disasters, this book develops a vision of adaptive
governance for property in land based on a critical re-assessment
of state-centric property law. This book will appeal to a broad
readership with interests in legal theory, property law, adaptive
governance, international development, refugee studies,
postcolonial studies, and natural disasters.
Peace-building in a number of contemporary contexts involves
fragile states, influential customary systems and histories of land
conflict arising from mass population displacement. This book is a
timely response to the increased international focus on
peace-building problems arising from population displacement and
post-conflict state fragility. It considers the relationship
between property and resilient customary systems in
conflict-affected East Timor. The chapters include micro-studies of
customary land and population displacement during the periods of
Portuguese colonization and Indonesian military occupation. There
is also analysis of the development of laws relating to customary
land in independent East Timor (Timor Leste). The book fills a gap
in socio-legal literature on property, custom and peace-building
and is of interest to property scholars, anthropologists, and
academics and practitioners in the emerging field of peace and
conflict studies.
Peace-building in a number of contemporary contexts involves
fragile states, influential customary systems and histories of land
conflict arising from mass population displacement. This book is a
timely response to the increased international focus on
peace-building problems arising from population displacement and
post-conflict state fragility. It considers the relationship
between property and resilient customary systems in
conflict-affected East Timor. The chapters include micro-studies of
customary land and population displacement during the periods of
Portuguese colonization and Indonesian military occupation. There
is also analysis of the development of laws relating to customary
land in independent East Timor (Timor Leste). The book fills a gap
in socio-legal literature on property, custom and peace-building
and is of interest to property scholars, anthropologists, and
academics and practitioners in the emerging field of peace and
conflict studies.
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