
Contents
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Land Redistribution and Climate Governance as Twin Issues Land Redistribution and Climate Governance as Twin Issues
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Thinking About Rights of Occupancy at Scale Thinking About Rights of Occupancy at Scale
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Toynbee’s Argument that Climate Change Predicts an Era of International Governance Toynbee’s Argument that Climate Change Predicts an Era of International Governance
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Does Global Collaboration have a Future? Does Global Collaboration have a Future?
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Techniques of Occupancy as a Program for Democratic Ecology Techniques of Occupancy as a Program for Democratic Ecology
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Epilogue: Why Land Redistribution Matters in the Age of Climate Change
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Published:May 2022
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Abstract
This chapter reviews the entire slow-motion collapse of the movement for occupancy rights, frame after frame, from a contemporary perspective. It explains how the great dream of redistribution of the earth's soil on a global scale was never realized during the optimistic decades although there were many piecemeal reallocations. Naive accounts of land reform generally attribute its failures to an inviolable right to property or to the disappearance of communism, including an increasing attitude of unconditional skepticism directed at centralized administration of all kinds. The chapter talks about how skepticism paralyzed national and international initiatives for redistributive justice that had been decades in the making. It proposes the causal dimensions of how climate change and land redistribution are bound up.
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