To date, property politics related to common property regimes, or “the commons,” has been dominated by European notions of property relations. In contrast to this tradition, this paper builds upon several specific threads of thinking to take questions of the racialization of the commons more seriously. More specifically, I will consider how abolitionist politics that helped bring about emancipation for African-Americans can still help think through property politics. I will use this framing to explore a cross-site research project extending between Atlanta and Sapelo Island, Georgia. These two sites share a common historical connection dating back to the U.S. Civil War and Sherman’s March to the Sea. Both are currently experiencing upheavals in property relations that can befit from a deeper understanding of the “abolitionist commons”.
Presenters
Nik Heynen
Dr. Nik Heynen is a Professor in the Department of Geography at the University of Georgia and an adjunct Professor in the Department of Anthropology. His research interests include urban political ecology and social movement theory and a host of related topics. His main research foci relate to the analysis of how social power relations, including class, race and gender are inscribed in the transformation of uneven nature/space, and how, in turn, these processes contribute to interrelated connections between nature, space and uneven development. He has most recently has been working to develop...
Nik Heynen
Dr. Nik Heynen is a Professor in the Department of Geography at the University of Georgia and an adjunct Professor in the Department of Anthropology. His research interests include urban political ecology and social movement theory and a host of related topics. His main research foci relate to the analysis of how social power relations, including class, race and gender are inscribed in the transformation of uneven nature/space, and how, in turn, these processes contribute to interrelated connections between nature, space and uneven development. He has most recently has been working to develop the notion of abolition ecology as framework to better investigate the independent and interconnected ways race, gender and class shape the politics of land, property and social reproduction.