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Contesting the property paradigm amid 'radical' constitutional change: Living Rent and the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016

Contesting the property paradigm amid 'radical' constitutional change: Living Rent and the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016
Contesting the property paradigm amid 'radical' constitutional change: Living Rent and the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016

This paper examines the interaction between ‘radical’ constitutional change, in the form of political devolution, and property systems in the UK, from the perspective of those at the margins of those systems. The paper adopts a property ‘from below’ approach and critically applies the theoretical framework developed by AJ van der Walt in Property in the Margins. In that book, van der Walt outlined how property systems frequently operate to resist democratic and constitutional change and transformation through the functioning of the property paradigm, which refers to a set of doctrinal, rhetorical, and logical assumptions and beliefs about the relative value and power of discrete property interests in law and in society. Building on van der Walt’s work, this paper takes eviction, which represents the landlord’s apex right, as a case study and considers how qualifications of that right have been reformed by the Private Residential Tenancies (Scotland) Act 2016. It is argued that while the strength of the property paradigm is apparent in both English and Scottish property systems, Living Rent, a national tenants’ union in Scotland, have organised tenants to effectively contest and, in some respects, displace the logic of the property paradigm during the reform process.

Living Rent, Private Residential Tenancies (Scotland) Act 2016, constitutional change, devolution, housing, property
0261-3875
399-416
Jordan, Mark
e558a744-84d8-405d-b453-f63cefa70b78
Jordan, Mark
e558a744-84d8-405d-b453-f63cefa70b78

Jordan, Mark (2024) Contesting the property paradigm amid 'radical' constitutional change: Living Rent and the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016. Legal Studies, 44 (3), 399-416. (doi:10.1017/lst.2024.4).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper examines the interaction between ‘radical’ constitutional change, in the form of political devolution, and property systems in the UK, from the perspective of those at the margins of those systems. The paper adopts a property ‘from below’ approach and critically applies the theoretical framework developed by AJ van der Walt in Property in the Margins. In that book, van der Walt outlined how property systems frequently operate to resist democratic and constitutional change and transformation through the functioning of the property paradigm, which refers to a set of doctrinal, rhetorical, and logical assumptions and beliefs about the relative value and power of discrete property interests in law and in society. Building on van der Walt’s work, this paper takes eviction, which represents the landlord’s apex right, as a case study and considers how qualifications of that right have been reformed by the Private Residential Tenancies (Scotland) Act 2016. It is argued that while the strength of the property paradigm is apparent in both English and Scottish property systems, Living Rent, a national tenants’ union in Scotland, have organised tenants to effectively contest and, in some respects, displace the logic of the property paradigm during the reform process.

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More information

Submitted date: 11 August 2023
Accepted/In Press date: 17 August 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 March 2024
Published date: 11 March 2024
Additional Information: A Corrigendum to this research output can be found at: https://doi.org/10.1017/lst.2024.10
Keywords: Living Rent, Private Residential Tenancies (Scotland) Act 2016, constitutional change, devolution, housing, property

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 481365
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481365
ISSN: 0261-3875
PURE UUID: 37aeadf9-87d9-47ca-abcd-53a77b7c6d4b
ORCID for Mark Jordan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1901-1255

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Date deposited: 08 Nov 2024 17:45
Last modified: 22 Nov 2024 02:45

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