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Replacing Private Property: The Case for Stewardship
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2009
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The notion of private property is endemically problematic and controversial. Although the notion has many defenders its critics have all the best lines: we know, of course, that the institution of private property was denounced as theft and attacked as the product of exploitation and class antagonism. More recently, the notion has been regarded as nothing more than a myth and, in a slight variation on Proudhon's refrain, dismissed as a form of fraud. As if this were not bad enough, it appears that even the thinkers of classical antiquity had severe reservations about the notion although, unusually, their worries were expressed without recourse to pithy rhetoric. Does the notion of private property have any conceptual or normative advantages? Ought we to abandon it altogether? In this essay we offer a negative answer to the first and an affirmative answer to the second question.
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References
1 By, respectively, Proudhon, P-J., What is Property? (Kelley, D. and Smith, B. (eds.), Cambridge 1994), p. 13Google Scholar and Marx, K. and Engels, F., The Communist Manifesto (Penguin 1967), p. 96.Google Scholar
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12 “Limited” because we have in mind a conception less demanding than that articulated by Marx: see Marx, K. and Engels, F., The German Ideology (London 1974), pp. 39–72Google Scholar and Marx, K., Capital, Volume 1 (Penguin Books 1976), pp. 163–177Google Scholar. Those marxist scholars who believe in two distinct periods of thought in Marx—the early and the late—often deny that there is any single account of ideology or false consciousness to be found in the works just cited. That dispute cannot be tackled here.
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18 Examples include Part V of the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949; Electricity Act 1957, s. 35(1); Town and Country Planning Act 1990, s. 57.
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55 See Passmore, J., Man's Responsibility for Nature (London, 2nd ed., 1980), ch. 2.Google Scholar Passmore dates the stewardship tradition back to the third century AD with the post-Platonic philosophers of the Roman Empire. See also Attfield, R., The Ethics of Environmental Concern (Athens, 2nd ed., 1991), ch. 3Google Scholar. The notion of stewardship seems to be in play in Locke, being used to characterise the relationship between God and our persons and bodies: see L:TT I. 39Google Scholar and II.6. R. Ashcraft thinks—although he provides little argument—that the notion of stewardship underlies everything Locke says about property and not just his thoughts about our relationship with our persons and bodies: see his Revolutionary Politics and Locke's Two Treatises of Government (New Jersey 1986), p. 263 n. 138.Google Scholar
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60 V.J. Yannacone, for example, writes that the “fundamental question facing all the 'owners' of natural resources or real property and those who would develop real property and exploit natural resources during the remainder of this century is whether the nominal title to property confers upon its holder a right to unrestricted possession and unrestrained use of the property or merely the right to use it for what may be deemed purposes socially acceptable at the time of such use”: “Property and Stewardship—Private Property Plus Public Interest Equals Social Property” (1978) 23 South Dakota LR. 71, p. 71.Google Scholar
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67 For example, Yannacone asserts that “the prime agricultural lands and arable soils of this [the American] nation have become so important to the welfare of the people of this generation and those generations yet unborn, that they impose the general obligation of a trustee for the public benefit upon the nominal owner: op. cit. n. 60, p. 74.Google Scholar Similarly, Caldwell maintains that ”a new conceptual basis for land use law and policy is required to reconcile the legitimate rights of the user of land with the interest of society in maintaining a high quality environment“: “Rights of Ownership or Rights of Use? The Need For a New Conceptual Basis for Land Use Policy” (1974) 15 William and Mary L.R. 759, p. 759Google Scholar. Karp asserts that “there is no justifiable reason for protecting the power of a landowner to waste and to destroy, when that conduct may harm the community's interest”: op. cit. n. 61 above, p. 750.Google Scholar
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77 Thus Barry asks, “Why are some logically possible proposals never advocated by anyone at all? Why, for example, is nobody in the United States in favour of having the Strategic Air Command take off and drop all its bombs on the USA? Obviously, because nobody at all believes this would be in his interests”: op. cit. n. 70 above, p. 195.Google Scholar
78 “The concept of public interest functions to justify the demand that members of the society regard themselves as obligated (not merely forced) to obey particular commands and to conform to particular policies which they regard as contrary to their personal interests”: Flathman, R., The Public Interest (New York 1966), p. 38, emphasis in original.Google Scholar
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89 We therefore think Gray, , op. cit. n. 59 above, pp. 207–214Google Scholar, a little hasty in locating stewardship within a communitarian political philosophy if by that he thinks it can only be at home there. Furthermore, this move may well be a hostage to fortune given: (i) the diversity of political and philosophical communitarianism which ranges from analyses of the political and other implications of specific accounts of human identity (see, for example, Taylor, C., Sources of the Self (Cambridge 1989), part I)Google Scholar to prescriptions about schooling (see Etzioni, A., The Spirit of Community (New York 1993), ch. 3)Google Scholar; and (ii) the suspicion that non-communitarian—usually dubbed “liberal”— philosophies have more than enough resources to accommodate communitarian concerns.
90 A classic statement of which is found in F., Nietzsche, The Genealogy of Morals (New York 1956).Google Scholar
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92 Hume, D., An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals (3rd ed., Selby-Bigge, L.A. and Nidditch, P.H. (eds.), Oxford 1975), Section III, part I, pp. 183–186Google Scholar. For an analysis of why our current situation may be so much more parlous see Beck, U., Risk Society (London 1992), chs. 1 and 2.Google Scholar
93 Caldwell, op. cit. n. 67 above, p. 770. Specifically, he suggests that rights of ownership in land should be redefined as rights of use and occupation of particular parcels of land. The effect of this is that while an individual with these rights would enjoy possession of the land, the ultimate repository of the rights is society. He further suggests that such rights of occupancy could be defined by law and land classified according to its economic and ecological capabilities. The occupier would be made aware of the land activities in which he might freely engage, as well as his obligations in relation to the land, which might include protection of air and water quality and the integrity of ecosystems: ibid. In the UK, the Countryside Commission recently published a handbook on Countryside Stewardship (CCP 453), in which they propose a scheme of management agreements “to enhance and conserve important English Landscapes, their wildlife habitats and history”. The scheme offers incentive payments to landowners for changes to farming and land management practice which produce conservation benefits or improved access and enjoyment of the countryside (p. 2).
94 For an argument that any attempt to justify a regime of private property faces near insuperable moral objections see Waldron, J., “Homelessness and the Issue of Freedom” (1991) 39 UCLA Law Review 295Google Scholar and “Property, Justification and Need” (1993) VI Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 185.Google Scholar
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