The transformation in prevailing conceptualizations of property and the drive to render land as fungible as possible, the desire to commoditize land that had been pursued in earnest since the seventeenth century in England, was realized in the space of the settler colony decades before it would be implemented in the United Kingdom. The author explores how the commodity logic of abstraction that subtended new property logics during this time, reflected in the Torrens system of title by registration, was accompanied by a racial logic of abstraction that rendered the land of the Native, or Savage vacant and ripe for appropriation. By way of conclusion, the author speculates on the ways in which the imposition of English property law in the set...
Writing under the somewhat question-begging title of The Resurrection of Title Registration in the...
Part one : origins -- Husbanding and hedging out the poor / Laura Brace -- Part two : the empire of ...
This article examines the statutory, common law, and traditional foundations of property rights in p...
The transformation in prevailing conceptualizations of property and the drive to render land as fung...
This article argues that the feudal doctrine of tenure continues to endure as the foundation for Aus...
The Australian law concerning real property is derived from the law of England. Ownership of land in...
When the Australian continent was settled by Europeans, an acquisition of land began that caused rep...
This article analyses the temporal effects of title registration and their relationship to race. It ...
In Colonial Lives of Property Brenna Bhandar examines how modern property law contributes to the for...
For centuries, transferring ownership of land under common law was a slow, complex process requiring...
In December 1996, the High Court of Australia handed down its judgment in the Wik case finding, by a...
This Article tells an untold history of the American title registry—a colonial bureaucratic innovati...
Until the decision of the High Court in Mabo, the universal acceptance and application of the Englis...
White settlement of Australia began a process whereby the Aboriginal people who had settled the Aust...
Until the decision of the High Court in Mabo, the universal acceptance and application of the Englis...
Writing under the somewhat question-begging title of The Resurrection of Title Registration in the...
Part one : origins -- Husbanding and hedging out the poor / Laura Brace -- Part two : the empire of ...
This article examines the statutory, common law, and traditional foundations of property rights in p...
The transformation in prevailing conceptualizations of property and the drive to render land as fung...
This article argues that the feudal doctrine of tenure continues to endure as the foundation for Aus...
The Australian law concerning real property is derived from the law of England. Ownership of land in...
When the Australian continent was settled by Europeans, an acquisition of land began that caused rep...
This article analyses the temporal effects of title registration and their relationship to race. It ...
In Colonial Lives of Property Brenna Bhandar examines how modern property law contributes to the for...
For centuries, transferring ownership of land under common law was a slow, complex process requiring...
In December 1996, the High Court of Australia handed down its judgment in the Wik case finding, by a...
This Article tells an untold history of the American title registry—a colonial bureaucratic innovati...
Until the decision of the High Court in Mabo, the universal acceptance and application of the Englis...
White settlement of Australia began a process whereby the Aboriginal people who had settled the Aust...
Until the decision of the High Court in Mabo, the universal acceptance and application of the Englis...
Writing under the somewhat question-begging title of The Resurrection of Title Registration in the...
Part one : origins -- Husbanding and hedging out the poor / Laura Brace -- Part two : the empire of ...
This article examines the statutory, common law, and traditional foundations of property rights in p...