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9 Int'l J.L. Built Env't 2 (2017)

handle is hein.journals/jppel9 and id is 1 raw text is: 






IJLBE
9,1


International Journal of Law in the
Built Environment
Vol 9 No.1,2017
pp. 2-3
©EmeraldPublishingLinited
175   /  E-1450
DOI 10.1108IJLBE-02-2017-0008


                      Guest editorial


Collective  approaches   to change: from  challenging   ownership   and
beyond

This Special Issue of the International Journal of Law in the Built Environment was
originally proposed to reflect the change of direction of the Challenging Ownership:
Meanings, Space  and Identity stream at the annual Socio-Legal Studies Association
(SLSA)  conference. The decision of the SLSA to refresh the conference streams and
themes, and to reissue its call for stream titles, allowed the conveners an opportunity to
revisit their subject areas and objectives. This resulted in the proposal of a newly titled
Property, People, Power and Place stream for the 2017 conference. This also aligned
with some changes to the convenership of the stream, with Penny English retiring from
the team, and Jill Dickinson and Vicky Heap  joining myself and Sarah Blandy  as
conveners of the new stream.
   While this change was significant in its context, it was reflective of a broader year of
change; for me personally but also professionally, as University life is undergoing major
changes, and politically our post-Brexit future is far from certain. This has led me to
reflect that in times of personal change or transition, we turn to friends and family for
support, just as the progression from Challenging Ownership to Property, People,
Power  and Place required communication and support from the invested conveners.
These  changes  have been  implemented  with  accord, assistance and amicability;
something  that is not always evident or even possible in a professional or political
context. Unfortunately, the aforementioned  support  mechanisms   are  harder to
implement  in a scaled-up model that forfeits choice and equality.
   Any  challenge to ownership obviously requires similar forms of change, transition
and a kickback against the status quo, but these changes can make people feel adrift,
overwhelm  them  and make  them  feel disconnected from their reality and/or others
around  them. It becomes  even  more  important  during these moments   to make
connections with others, find support networks and articulate new possibilities. As
Dumbledore  would put it; We are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are
divided. Professionally and  politically, the changes  that we   face are  truly
overwhelming  at times, but the opportunities for a shared voice must be found.
   This Special Issue provides an exciting opportunity to see a range of international
and collaborative approaches to our common  purpose; the challenge of concepts of
ownership  through analyses of space, meaning of ownership, or identity. The Issue
commences  with Mick  Strack's consideration of native rights to land in New Zealand
and the dichotomy between Maori and State recognitions of property rights in land and
rivers. This theme is further developed in Emily Walsh's exploration of the public/
private land use control systems in the UK and the USA and the relationship between
private citizen and State.
   The first of the collaborative pieces in the issue sees Tilak Ginige, Sophie Childs and
Hannah   Pateman  analyse the recent cases of deliberate concealment of planning
breaches in the UK, and consider the implications for UK planning law under the Town
and  Country Planning  Act 1990. The  second collaborative piece by Hector Sim6n
Moreno, Nnria Lambea  Llop and Rosa Maria Garcia Teruel addresses the possibility of

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