Property is a
relational concept. However the ways in which its relationality unfolds
are multiple, as are its impacts on the conservation of nature. This
article argues that property's relationality can be interpreted by
reference to two distinct paradigmatic views: the first emphasizing its
socio-legal relationality, the second focussing on property's ecological
relationality. The first paradigm finds its justification in modern
property law theory and culminates with a conceptualization of property
as stewardship. The second paradigm, anchored in phenomenological
thought, places the accent upon practices, movement and dwelling. It is argued here that UK conservation law
operates with an understanding of property stemming uniquely from the
first paradigm, yet the context it seeks to regulate is also permeated
by the manifestation of ecologically embedded property. What counts as
property is therefore contestable, and certain answers are marginalized
by current conservation law. It is demonstrated that without acknowledgment of the
presence of the two meanings of property, conservation law is unlikely
to achieve full environmental effectiveness.
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