This article argues for an expansive understanding of home as an experience, and so pushes beyond the traditional bounds of (home)ownership – either freehold or leasehold ownership – as restricted to house. Home – the desired experience motivating the article – is a feeling of security, self-expression, and relationships and family. Laws, it is argued, must embody certain conditions for individuals to experience home in this way, and these are discussed. Overall, the article’s contribution is to encourage future legal research into whether specific Australian laws are perpetuating an inferior experience of home for some individuals because they undermine conditions for home set out herein. However, the article recognises that home is a chal...
The idea of ‘home’ is problematic for lawyers. Although the significance of home sometimes appears ...
This article deals with property laws, based on two premises. Firstly, property law as means to a co...
This article explores the problematic nature of the label “home ownership” through a case study of t...
This thesis considers the experience of home in Australian law, and the relevance of law to that ex...
It is difficult to overstate the everyday importance of home in law. Home provides the backdrop for ...
The goal of owning one’s home, as opposed to ‘just renting’, is deeply ingrained in Australian cultu...
This paper aims to analyse the development and application of the conceptual framework within which ...
'Home' is not an easy concept to pin down. Although the term is instantly familiar, and the physical...
Theoretical evidence in the behavioural and social sciences has shown the home to be a phenomenon bo...
Within Anglophone societies, the concept of home is closely tied to homeownership, and consequently,...
Much academic scholarship has considered the meaning of home as it relates to the dwelling. A small,...
This chapter explores ruptures and incursions at the boundaries of ‘home ownership’ as currently uph...
This article, which is the first comprehensive discussion of the American legal concept of home, mak...
In this short paper I suggest that the transition of the concept of home as a place where the indivi...
The political economy of housing in Australia has shifted; the family home is increasingly viewed as...
The idea of ‘home’ is problematic for lawyers. Although the significance of home sometimes appears ...
This article deals with property laws, based on two premises. Firstly, property law as means to a co...
This article explores the problematic nature of the label “home ownership” through a case study of t...
This thesis considers the experience of home in Australian law, and the relevance of law to that ex...
It is difficult to overstate the everyday importance of home in law. Home provides the backdrop for ...
The goal of owning one’s home, as opposed to ‘just renting’, is deeply ingrained in Australian cultu...
This paper aims to analyse the development and application of the conceptual framework within which ...
'Home' is not an easy concept to pin down. Although the term is instantly familiar, and the physical...
Theoretical evidence in the behavioural and social sciences has shown the home to be a phenomenon bo...
Within Anglophone societies, the concept of home is closely tied to homeownership, and consequently,...
Much academic scholarship has considered the meaning of home as it relates to the dwelling. A small,...
This chapter explores ruptures and incursions at the boundaries of ‘home ownership’ as currently uph...
This article, which is the first comprehensive discussion of the American legal concept of home, mak...
In this short paper I suggest that the transition of the concept of home as a place where the indivi...
The political economy of housing in Australia has shifted; the family home is increasingly viewed as...
The idea of ‘home’ is problematic for lawyers. Although the significance of home sometimes appears ...
This article deals with property laws, based on two premises. Firstly, property law as means to a co...
This article explores the problematic nature of the label “home ownership” through a case study of t...