Places of Possibility
Description
- Reveals how community land ownership is more just and sustainable than private ownership
- Features original theoretical insights into ideas of property and nature that disrupt the process of neoliberalisation
- Based on original research conducted by the author in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland
List of Maps viii
List of Photographs ix
List of Tables x
Acknowledgements xi
1 Placing Possibility 1
2 Working Property 34
3 Working Nature 79
4 Working the Wind 127
5 Working Places 175
6 Conclusion – Working Possibilities 214
References 227
Index 248
“This is rarely the stuff of academic study but is at the heart of Places of Possibility’s profound ambitions and most important contribution: anticipating “more socially, environmentally and economically generous ‘postneoliberalisms.” (Antipode, 1 August 2013)
A. Fiona D. Mackenzie is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada and Honorary Professor, University of the Highlands and Islands. Professor Mackenzie has carried out in-depth qualitative research on the Isle of Harris, the Outer Hebrides, and is the author of Land, Ecology and Resistance in Kenya, 1880-1952 (1998).To maximize the efficiencies of land ownership, the market-driven approach of neoliberalism would have it placed entirely in the hands of the private sector. Places of Possibility reveals how community land ownership can open up the political, social, environmental, and economic terrain to far more socially just and sustainable possibilities than the privatization espoused by neoliberalism.
Drawing on comprehensive qualitative research carried out in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland, environmental geography specialist A. Fiona D. Mackenzie argues that these possibilities are created through the disruption of prevalent norms of property and nature. The author shows how current land reforms taking place in the islands of the Outer Hebrides are revealed to be places of possibility where neoliberal norms of enclosure and privatization — and of a nature separate from the social — are unsettled with community land ownership. With a careful balance of original theoretical insights and intellectual rigor, Places of Possibility dispels prevailing notions of neoliberal globalization to reveal the rich political possibilities of community land ownership and its place in the twenty-first century world.
"In this splendid book Fiona Mackenzie provides an excellent analysis of the principles and practice of community land-ownership, an idea which is transforming the landscape of the Scottish highlands. Drawing on extensive fieldwork in the Hebrides and a very wide range of interdisciplinary references she adds depth and clarity to our understanding of this profound shift in Scottish society."—Ewen A. Cameron, Professor of History, University of Edinburgh
Because Fiona Mackenzie has spent a lot of time in the area, she has got to grips with the Highlands and Islands experience of community ownership in a way that no other academic author has done. Mackenzie has much to say that is novel, perceptive and important, while her background and experience is such as to enable her to bring a range of theoretical perspectives to bear on her subject matter.
—James Hunter, Emeritus Professor of History, University of the Highlands and Islands
PUBLISHER:
Wiley
ISBN-13:
9781405191722
BINDING:
Hardback
BISAC:
Science
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 160.30(W) x Dimensions: 237.50(H) x Dimensions: 20.30(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English