Extant studies on land dispossession often focus on its economic and extra-economic aspects, with respective emphasis on the operation of market mechanisms and the deployment of state-led coercion in bringing about the separation of households from their land. This article draws attention to the under-examined role of informal institutions in the politics of dispossession. Social organisations such as lineages and clans pervade grassroots societies and are central to land control and configurations of property rights. In China, the reconsolidation of lineages as shareholding corporations that develop real estate and operate land transfers has rendered them prominent actors in the politics of land and urbanisation. Drawing on an empirical case study, this article argues that informal institutions play a crucial role in mediating both the economic and extra-economic processes of dispossession. It further shows how, by providing the networks necessary for collective mobilisation and supplying the normative framework through which rightful shares in land are claimed, social organisations are at the same time instrumental in the organisation of anti-dispossession struggles. By unravelling the social dynamics that underlie land expropriation, this article offers a nuanced perspective to the politics of dispossession that goes beyond narratives of state-led coercion and market compulsion.
机构:
Chongqing Technol & Business Univ, Sch Tourism & Land Resource, Chongqing, Peoples R ChinaChongqing Technol & Business Univ, Sch Tourism & Land Resource, Chongqing, Peoples R China
机构:
Univ Washington, Henry M Jackson Sch Int Studies, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
Univ Washington, South Asia Studies, Seattle, WA 98195 USAJohns Hopkins Univ, Sociol, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA