Description du projet
Une approche non-eurocentrique de l’histoire du régime foncier
Quand est apparue la notion de propriété foncière? Selon des études européennes, elle remonte à la fin du XVIIIe siècle. Des experts asiatiques, africains et américains avancent quant à eux le XVIe siècle. Le projet IberLAND, financé par l’UE, étudiera ces discours en examinant le développement des systèmes de régime foncier dans les territoires des empires portugais et espagnol en Europe, en Afrique, en Amérique et en Asie. Le projet propose une approche non-eurocentrique du développement de la propriété foncière, au lieu d’adopter une perspective globale. IberLAND intégrera différentes historiographies régionales et combinera les histoires juridiques coloniales et européennes, en ciblant six études de cas et en s’appuyant sur des recherches détaillées dans les archives locales.
Objectif
The experience of empire decisively shaped the institution of private property in land. From a global perspective, however, the history of this institution is far from straightforward. While European scholarship places the advent of individual property rights in the late 18th century, scholarship on Asia, Africa, and the Americas often attributes the onset of the paradigm of private property to the arrival of Europeans in the 16th century. This discrepancy of almost 300 years is difficult to reconcile. If Europeans had not yet experienced it themselves, how could they introduce the paradigm of proprietary rights across the world during the process of colonization? IberLAND revisits these incongruent historiographical narratives by studying the development of land tenure regimes in the African, American, Asian, and European territories of the Portuguese and Spanish empires. IberLAND takes a unique approach to the study of land tenure by departing from traditional approaches that assume that Europeans ‘invented’ ideas of private property and then ‘transplanted’ them to their overseas possessions. By contrast, IberLAND aims to construct a non-Eurocentric history of the development of land tenure from a global perspective. The research approach cuts across traditional research frontiers not only by integrating diverse regional historiographies but also by combining European and colonial (legal) history. The project will focus on six case studies and build on extensive research in local archives. The research will be strongly interdisciplinary and will gain insights from global, legal, and ethno-history in dialogue with legal theory, postcolonial studies, and decolonial perspectives. By providing a decentered history of land tenure, IberLAND should influence research in the fields of law, anthropology, and history, and provide a global perspective of law for an interconnected world in which conflicts about land use and extractivism are becoming increasingly important.
Champ scientifique
Mots‑clés
Programme(s)
Régime de financement
ERC-COG - Consolidator GrantInstitution d’accueil
30167 Hannover
Allemagne