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Despotic dominion : property rights in British settler societies  Cover Image Book Book

Despotic dominion : property rights in British settler societies

McLaren, John, 1940- (Added Author). Buck, A. R. (Added Author). Wright, Nancy E. (Added Author).

Summary: "This book brings together a variety of perspectives to provide a comprehensive analysis of the important issue of property rights, which continues to animate the body politic of Australia and Canada in particular. As such, it will be of interest to students and scholars of colonial history, property theory, indigenous studies, and law, as well as to judges, lawyers, and the inquisitive general reader."--BOOK JACKET.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780774810722
  • ISBN: 0774810726
  • Physical Description: print
    viii, 312 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm.
  • Publisher: Vancouver : UBC Press, c2005.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note: 1. Property rights in the colonial imagination and experience / John McLaren, A. R. Buck and Nancy E. Wright -- 2. Encountering the spirit in the land : "property" in a kinship-based legal order / Richard Overstall -- 3. Paper empires : the legal dimensions of French and English ventures in North America / Brian Slattery -- 4. Concepts of economic improvement and the social construction of property rights : highlights from the English-speaking world / John C. Weaver -- 5. Warm reception in a cold climate : English property law and the suppression of the Canadian legal identity / Bruce Ziff -- 6. Land law, liberalism, and the agrarian ideal : British North America, 1750-1920 / Philip Girard -- 7. When private rights become public wrongs : property and the state in Prince Edward Island in the 1830s / Rusty Bittermann and Margaret McCallum -- 8. "This remnant of feudalism" : primogeniture and political culture in colonial New South Wales, with some Canadian comparisons / A. R. Buck -- 9. "The lady vanishes" : women and property rights in nineteenth-century New South Wales / Nancy E. Wright -- 10. The establishment and preservation of Hutterite communalism in North America, 1870-1925 / Alvin J. Esau -- 11. The failed experiments : the demise of Doukhobor systems of communal property landholding in Saskatchewan and British Columbia, 1899-1999 / John McLaren -- 12. Coexistence and colonization on pastoral leaseholds in South Australia, 1851-99 / Robert Foster -- 13. Indian reserves, aboriginal fisheries, and the public right to fish in British Columbia, 1876-82 / Douglas Harris -- Afterword / John McLaren, A. R. Buck and Nancy E. Wright.
Subject: Right of property -- Great Britain -- Colonies -- History
Right of property -- Colonies -- Great Britain -- History

Available copies

  • 2 of 2 copies available at Selkirk College.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 2 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Circulation Modifier Holdable? Status Due Date Courses
Castlegar Campus Library K 721.5 D47 2004 (Text)
Copy: c. 2
B001176767 Local Not holdable Available -
Castlegar Campus Library K 721.5 D47 2004 (Text)
Copy: c. 1
B001145747 Local-Circ Volume hold Available -

  • Book News
    William Blackstone once used the term "despotic dominion" to indicate the legal status of the property rights of the Englishman. However, the status of property law in British settler societies was considerably more ambiguous and complex. Editors McLaren (law, U. of Victoria, Canada), Buck (law, Macquarie U., Australia), and Wright (director, Centre for the Interdisciplinary Study of Property Rights, U. of Newcastle, Australia) present 12 essays on the history of property law and rights in these societies that are animated by three general themes: the ways in which indigenous peoples, colonial officials, and settlers envisaged use of land; how they viewed their relationship to the land in cultural terms; and how conflicting pulls of centralizing notions of law and justice and the desire for local legal solutions influenced the evolution of property law. Distributed in the US by the U. of Washington Press. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
  • Chicago Distribution Center
    Despotic Dominion brings together the work of scholars whose study of the evolution of property law in the colonies recognizes the value in locating property law and rights within the broader political, economic, and intellectual contexts of those societies. The stimulus for this new interdisciplinary scholarship has emerged from litigation and political action for the resolution of questions of Aboriginal title and other disputes over property rights in several former settler colonies, most notably Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. As the essays in this book demonstrate, a significant part of the recent explosion in interest and speculation about property rights relates historically to the securing of a more reliable cultural context for assessing these claims. For this reason, Despotic Dominion will be of interest not only to students and researchers of colonial history, but also to scholars of native studies and law, as well as those interested in the contested terrain of property rights.
  • Univ of Washington Pr

    In the late 18th century, the English jurist William Blackstone famously described property as "that sole and despotic dominion." What Blackstone meant was that property was an "absolute right, inherent in every Englishman . . . which consists in the free use, enjoyment, and disposal of all acquisitions without any control or diminution, save only by the laws of the land." In light of the intervening 250 years of colonization, Blackstone’s "despotic dominion" has assumed new and more ambiguous meanings. It is the ambiguity of the meanings of property and the tensions that were and still are evident in property disputes with which this book is concerned.

    Despotic Dominion brings together the work of scholars whose study of the evolution of property law in the colonies recognizes the value in locating property law and rights within the broader political, economic, and intellectual contexts of those societies. The stimulus for this new interdisciplinary scholarship has emerged from litigation and political action for the resolution of questions of Aboriginal title and other disputes over property rights in several former settler colonies, most notably Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. As the essays in this book demonstrate, a significant part of the recent explosion in interest and speculation about property rights relates historically to the securing of a more reliable cultural context for assessing these claims. For this reason, Despotic Dominion will be of interest not only to students and researchers of colonial history, but also to scholars of native studies and law, as well as those interested in the contested terrain of property rights.

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