2010
DOI: 10.1080/10383441.2010.10854687
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Idea, Sovereignty, Eco-colonialism and the Future

Abstract: This article argues that human-caused climate change reveals previously unrecognised or overlooked aspects of the liberal concept of private property. It suggests that the concept of private property facilitates the ʻclimate-change relationshipʼ, a connection between human activities, the natural world and the human consequences of climate change. Based upon this link, the article offers four reflections on private property and its role in global phenomena like climate change: first, that the ʻideaʼ of private… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…According to Christoph Engel (2002), recent increasing regulative restrictions that are imposed on owners can be seen as a ‘ Verdünnung ’ (dilution, or thinning) of property rights. However, the notion of property as an absolute dominion over things , manifested in exclusive private ownership , is still influential as an imaginary and describes quite well the commonly shared idea of what private property means (Babie, 2010: 540). It may in fact be conceived as an underlying ‘ Leitidee ’ (central idea, basic conception) (Hann, 2007: 288) in liberal and neoclassical thought on property.…”
Section: Conflicting Views On Property and Ownershipmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…According to Christoph Engel (2002), recent increasing regulative restrictions that are imposed on owners can be seen as a ‘ Verdünnung ’ (dilution, or thinning) of property rights. However, the notion of property as an absolute dominion over things , manifested in exclusive private ownership , is still influential as an imaginary and describes quite well the commonly shared idea of what private property means (Babie, 2010: 540). It may in fact be conceived as an underlying ‘ Leitidee ’ (central idea, basic conception) (Hann, 2007: 288) in liberal and neoclassical thought on property.…”
Section: Conflicting Views On Property and Ownershipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As mentioned in the introduction, one strand of critique of the standard conception of property rights perceives it as being causally connected to unsustainable ways of living. Paul Babie argues that climate change ‘is a problem made possible by the concept of private property, and made real by its idea’ (Babie, 2010: 542). According to Babie, the popular idea, or imaginary, of private property conceives it ‘as an inviolable sole and despotic dominion controlling an invisible hand, which is justifiable because in that way the choices made pursuant to such power, through markets, produce benefit for others’ (Babie, 2010: 542).…”
Section: Imaginaries Of Sustainable Propertymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…efforts toward stricter lawn pesticide legislation), where individual autonomy is usurped in favour of a perceived greater public good (healthier lawn ecologies and cleaner water supply), Sandberg and Foster (2005, p. 483) suggest that those opposed to these measures make their case by citing "the sovereignty of homeowners with property rights as the ultimate decision makers". Overall, these conflicts within a global carbon emissions context (Adler, 2009;Babie, 2010). They have also explored how property boundaries may be obscured by impacts of climate change (e.g.…”
Section: ) Describementioning
confidence: 99%