ABSTRACT
This book argues that as colonialism brought the concept of individual, as opposed to collective, land ownership to indigenous society, along with Western surveying techniques, the changes that resulted altered the relationship of the state to its citizens, and, thereby, the structure of local societies. The book considers these issues in all of East Asia, including China, Japan and Korea, focusing in particular on Hong Kong, which was subject to British rule from 1842 to 1997, and on Taiwan, which was subject to Japanese rule from 1895 to 1945. The book discusses how, although the main impact of land ownership by individuals and modern surveying were felt after colonialism had ended, it is by studying the introduction of these factors that their impact can be most clearly understood.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|30 pages
One plot one owner
chapter 1|17 pages
Landlords, squatters, and tenants
part II|37 pages
Academies, lineages, and temples
chapter 3|14 pages
Institutionalizing public-service land holding in early Japanese colonial Taiwan
chapter 5|14 pages
Temple property management in colonial Taiwan
part III|29 pages
The Torrens System
chapter 7|12 pages
Credit institutions and the land market in the New Territories of Hong Kong
part IV|66 pages
Mapping colonies by trigonometrical survey
chapter 10|13 pages
Two land investigations in modern Taiwan
part V|13 pages
Land reform in China to the 1930s