Making Space for Property

被引:35
作者
Blomley, Nicholas [1 ]
机构
[1] Simon Fraser Univ, Dept Geog, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada
关键词
property; common law; critical legal geography; performativity; reconciliation; BRITISH-COLUMBIA; TREATY; RIGHTS; TITLE; LAW;
D O I
10.1080/00045608.2014.941738
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
A modern-day treaty process in British Columbia, Canada, involving First Nations (1) and the federal and provincial governments, entails a struggle to carve out both metaphoric and material space for indigenous land and title. Despite considerable opposition, the state has insisted that First Nations will hold their treaty lands as a form of "fee simple," this being the way most private property owners hold property, granting broad rights to access, use, and alienation. This is said to generate what the state terms certainty, a concept predicated on the idea of property as a priori, singular, and definite. I explore the resultant contest through a performative lens that treats property not as essence, but as effect. Tracing the complicated ways in which fee simple is performed in the treaty process reveals that fee simple is anything but. Multiple, competing, and overlapping fee simples are in circulation. The identification of this multiplicity offers valuable lessons for our understanding of the contemporary space of postcolonial reconciliation.
引用
收藏
页码:1291 / 1306
页数:16
相关论文
共 57 条
[1]  
Allen Jessie., 2008, Suffolk University Law Review, V41, P773
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1995, STRANGE MULTIPLICITY, DOI DOI 10.1017/CBO9781139170888
[3]  
[Anonymous], PRAGMATISM NEW WAY S
[4]  
B. C. Treaty Commission, WHY TREAT LEG PERSP
[5]  
Baird K., 2007, COMMUNICATION
[6]  
Benson L., 2013, THESIS S FRASER U BU
[7]   Anxious reconciliation(s): unsettling foundations and spatializing history [J].
Bhandar, B .
ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING D-SOCIETY & SPACE, 2004, 22 (06) :831-845
[8]  
Black CF, 2011, DISCOURSE LAW, P1
[9]   Searching for guarantees in the midst of uncertainty: Negotiating Aboriginal rights and title in British Columbia [J].
Blackburn, C .
AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, 2005, 107 (04) :586-596
[10]  
Blomley N., T I BRIT GE IN PRESS