ABSTRACT

This book takes the concept of piracy as a starting point to discuss the instability of property as a social construction and how this is spatially situated. Piracy is understood as acts and practices that emerge in zones where the construction and definition of property is ambiguous. Media piracy is a frequently used example where file-sharers and copyright holders argue whether culture and information is a common resource to be freely shared or property to be protected. This book highlights that this is not a dilemma unique to immaterial resources: concepts such as property, ownership and the rights of use are just as diffuse when it comes to spatial resources such as land, water, air or urban space.

By structuring the book around this heterogeneous understanding of piracy as an analytical perspective, the editors and contributors advance a trans-disciplinary and multi-theoretical approach to place and property. In doing so, the book moves from theoretical discussions on commons and property to empirical cases concerning access to and appropriation of land, natural and cultural resources. The chapters cover areas such as maritime piracy, the philosophical and legal foundations of property rights, mining and land rights, biopiracy and traditional knowledge, indigenous rights, colonization of space, military expansionism and the enclosure of urban space.

This book is essential reading for a variety of disciplines including indigenous studies, cultural studies, geography, political economy, law, environmental studies and all readers concerned with piracy and the ambiguity of property.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

Property, place and piracy

chapter 3|13 pages

Commons, piracy and property

Crisis, conflict and resistance

chapter 4|14 pages

Property, sovereignty, piracy and the commons

Early modern enclosure and the foundation of the state

chapter 5|15 pages

Unreal property

Anarchism, anthropology and alchemy

chapter 6|16 pages

Piratical constructions of humanity

Innocence, property, and the human–nature divide

chapter 8|13 pages

Compensation in the absence of punishment

Rethinking Somali piracy as a form of maritime xeer

chapter 9|17 pages

Commodification of country

An Australian case study in community resistance to mining

chapter 10|17 pages

Privateering on the cosmic frontier?

Mining celestial bodies and the ‘NewSpace’ quest for private property in outer space

chapter 11|17 pages

‘The ancestry land’

China’s pursuit of dominance in the South China Sea

chapter 12|17 pages

Nuclear testing and the ‘terra nullius doctrine’

From life sciences to life writing

chapter 13|13 pages

From biopiracy to bioprospecting

Negotiating the limits of propertization

chapter 14|15 pages

The gated housing hierarchy

chapter 15|16 pages

Pirate places in Bangkok

IPRs, vendors and urban order

chapter 16|13 pages

The real Gruen Transfer

Enclosing the right to the city

chapter 17|4 pages

Epilogue