ABSTRACT

This book explores the relationship between space, subjectivity and property in order to invert conventional socio-legal understandings of property. Sarah Keenan demonstrates that new political possibilities for property may be unveiled by thinking about property in terms of space and belonging, rather than exclusion.

Drawing on feminist and critical race theory, this book shifts focus away from the propertied subject and on to the broader spaces in and through which the propertied subject is located. Using case studies, such as analyses of compulsory leases under Australia’s Northern Territory Intervention and lesbian asylum cases from a range of jurisdictions, Keenan argues that these spaces consist of networks of relations that revolve around belonging: not just belonging between subject and object, as property is traditionally understood, but also the less explored relation of belonging between the part and the whole.

This book therefore offers a conceptually useful way of analysing a wide range of socio-legal issues. It will be of relevance to those working in the area of property and legal geography, but also to those with more general interests in socio-legal studies, social and political theory, postcolonial studies, critical race studies and gender and sexuality studies.

chapter 1|16 pages

‘Prossy has been saved!’

A sense of unease, a lack of connection, a spatial turn

chapter 2|22 pages

Law/space/belonging?

Legal geography and its discontents

chapter 3|26 pages

From positionality to spatiality

Theorising legal geography and finding life in space

chapter 4|32 pages

Subversive property

Reshaping malleable spaces of belonging

chapter 5|31 pages

Homelands

The role of property in Australia's Northern Territory Intervention

chapter 6|22 pages

Your lesbian property please

Refugee law and the production of homonormative landscapes

chapter 7|20 pages

Taking space with you

Inheritance and belonging across space and time