ABSTRACT

The People’s Property? is the first book-length scholarly examination of how negotiations over the ownership, control, and peopling of public space are central to the development of publicity, citizenship, and democracy in urban areas. The book asks the questions: Why does it matter who owns public property? Who controls it? Who is in it? Donald Mitchell and Lynn A. Staeheli answer the questions by focusing on the interplay between property (in its geographical sense, as a parcel of owned space) and people. Property rights are often defined as the "right to exclude." It is important, therefore, to understand who (what individual and corporate entities, governed by what kinds of regulations and restrictions) owns publicly accessible property. It is likewise important to understand the changing bases for excluding some people and classes of people from otherwise publicly accessible property. That is to say, it is important to understand how modes of access and possibilities for association in publicly accessible space vary for different individuals and different classes of people, if we are to understand the role public spaces play in shaping democratic possibilities. In what ways are urban public spaces "the people’s property" – and in what ways are they not? What does this mean for citizenship and the constitution of an inclusive, democratic polity? The book develops its argument through five case studies: protest in Washington DC; struggles over the Plaza of Santa Fe, NM; homelessness and property redevelopment in San Diego, CA; the enclosure of public space in a mall in Syracuse, NY; and community gardens in New York City. Though empirically focused on the US, the book is of broader interests as publics in all liberal democracies are under-going rapid reconsideration and transformation.

chapter 1|22 pages

Permitting Protest in Washington, DC*

chapter 2|24 pages

Property, Law, and the Plaza of Santa Fe, New Mexico

Turning Social Relations into Space *

chapter 3|26 pages

Privately Public

Property Redevelopment, Public Space, and Homelessness in San Diego *

chapter 4|22 pages

Publicly Private

Regulating Space and Creating Community in Syracuse's Carousel Center *

chapter 5|20 pages

Publicizing Public Property?

The Struggle for the Public in New York's Community Gardens *

chapter 6|26 pages

Placing the Public

Discourses of Publicity and Practices of Property

chapter 7|14 pages

Power, Politics, and Regimes of Publicity

chapter |10 pages

Postscript: Interventions