Abstract |
Purpose - This paper aims to investigate the potential of the "image-idea" of a "circular economy" for rethinking property in law: In particular, to develop a strategy for making visible "alternative property practices" of community ownership across the subject areas of business and property law, to enhance the visibility of models of community ownership and interrogate their potential. Design/methodology/approach - Case study research was undertaken into three public houses to investigate the ways in which the orthodoxies of property and ownership in the academy are challenged by evidence of "alternative property practices" in the community. Findings - Using this approach renders visible tensions between the logics of economic value and social asset, carried in processes of abstraction and materiality, and mediated within the field of property by the development of techniques for holding property as title and benefit. It reveals the ways in which "property" as idea, practice and technique is used by people seeking to disrupt or defend against the economic logic of profit and investment. It raises questions concerning how property and law is imaged in the academy and it introduces one way of using an image-idea to open new perspectives and potential. Research limitations/implications - These implications emerge: the partiality of orthodox accounts of property; the importance of thinking property in terms of life-cycle and logics ecologies, field and techniques: how a model-theory derived from one discipline can be repurposed, in a second life, in an other discipline as an "image-idea" to refresh the host discipline; the significance of investigating "community assets" within and for property law and the need for more research into "alternative property practices" and the importance of case studies. Practical implications - An enhanced knowledge of the development and potential of "community assets" within the academy, and of the potential to promote and support "alternative property practices" with the requisite legal skills and techniques alongside a consideration of the limits of formal law in terms of policy expectations. Social implications - The research is of value to community activists in thinking how law can be used to support community development in terms of holding community assets; and the limitations of formal law which then requires an embedded approach considering how the development of practices and narratives can support community initiatives in relation to property held for community benefit. Originality/value - There has been very little coverage of "community assets" within legal research. especially moving across business and property as subject areas, and no coverage on public houses taken into community ownership. This paper combines an introduction to the relevant legal forms with a consideration of the use of them in practice: considering, in particular, how practices and narratives deployed by and within the community think and present "property" as a means by which to counter the economic logic of profit. All this is made possible through the use of case-studies made visible by the utilization of the image-idea of the circular economy used here not as a model-theory, but rather as an aid to opening thinking into new territories accessed through new perspectives. |