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Moreover, the growing risks associated with climate change, including increased flooding in low lying coastal areas, threaten to unsettle established patterns of valuation. In such contexts, land values become contingent on emerging forms of environmental risk, raising difficult questions about insurance, compensation and the allocation of public responsibility.
Taken together, these dynamics indicate that progressive land politics cannot be confined to market regulation alone. Confronting contemporary land and housing crises may therefore require not only regulatory reform but also a shift in the imaginaries that underpin how land itself is valued. This involves recognising the collective production of land value, incorporating environmental and social considerations into existing frameworks and expanding public and collective forms of ownership and access that are not governed solely by market imperatives.
Moreover, the growing risks associated with climate change, including increased flooding in low lying coastal areas, threaten to unsettle established patterns of valuation. In such contexts, land values become contingent on emerging forms of environmental risk, raising difficult questions about insurance, compensation and the allocation of public responsibility.
Taken together, these dynamics indicate that progressive land politics cannot be confined to market regulation alone. Confronting contemporary land and housing crises may therefore require not only regulatory reform but also a shift in the imaginaries that underpin how land itself is valued. This involves recognising the collective production of land value, incorporating environmental and social considerations into existing frameworks and expanding public and collective forms of ownership and access that are not governed solely by market imperatives.
Moreover, the growing risks associated with climate change, including increased flooding in low lying coastal areas, threaten to unsettle established patterns of valuation. In such contexts, land values become contingent on emerging forms of environmental risk, raising difficult questions about insurance, compensation and the allocation of public responsibility.
Moreover, the growing risks associated with climate change, including increased flooding in low lying coastal areas, threaten to unsettle established patterns of valuation. In such contexts, land values become contingent on emerging forms of environmental risk, raising difficult questions about insurance, compensation and the allocation of public responsibility.
Taken together, these dynamics indicate that progressive land politics cannot be confined to market regulation alone. Confronting contemporary land and housing crises may therefore require not only regulatory reform but also a shift in the imaginaries that underpin how land itself is valued. This involves recognising the collective production of land value, incorporating environmental and social considerations into existing frameworks and expanding public and collective forms of ownership and access that are not governed solely by market imperatives.
Moreover, the growing risks associated with climate change, including increased flooding in low lying coastal areas, threaten to unsettle established patterns of valuation. In such contexts, land values become contingent on emerging forms of environmental risk, raising difficult questions about insurance, compensation and the allocation of public responsibility.
Taken together, these dynamics indicate that progressive land politics cannot be confined to market regulation alone. Confronting contemporary land and housing crises may therefore require not only regulatory reform but also a shift in the imaginaries that underpin how land itself is valued. This involves recognising the collective production of land value, incorporating environmental and social considerations into existing frameworks and expanding public and collective forms of ownership and access that are not governed solely by market imperatives.
Moreover, the growing risks associated with climate change, including increased flooding in low lying coastal areas, threaten to unsettle established patterns of valuation. In such contexts, land values become contingent on emerging forms of environmental risk, raising difficult questions about insurance, compensation and the allocation of public responsibility.
Taken together, these dynamics indicate that progressive land politics cannot be confined to market regulation alone. Confronting contemporary land and housing crises may therefore require not only regulatory reform but also a shift in the imaginaries that underpin how land itself is valued. This involves recognising the collective production of land value, incorporating environmental and social considerations into existing frameworks and expanding public and collective forms of ownership and access that are not governed solely by market imperatives.
Taken together, these dynamics indicate that progressive land politics cannot be confined to market regulation alone. Confronting contemporary land and housing crises may therefore require not only regulatory reform
Moreover, the growing risks associated with climate change, including increased flooding in low lying coastal areas, threaten to unsettle established patterns of valuation. In such contexts, land values become contingent on emerging forms of environmental risk, raising difficult questions about insurance, compensation and the allocation of public responsibility.
Taken together, these dynamics indicate that progressive land politics cannot be confined to market regulation alone. Confronting contemporary land and housing crises may therefore require not only regulatory reform but also a shift in the imaginaries that underpin how land itself is valued. This involves recognising the collective production of land value, incorporating environmental and social considerations into existing frameworks and expanding public and collective forms of ownership and access that are not governed solely by market imperatives.
Über den Autor
Dr Alexander Dobeson is an Assistant Professor at Copenhagen Business School. His research examines the social, technical and cultural dimensions of property, including the privatisation of access rights, land markets, land reform, cooperative forms of ownership and economic democracy.