Shifting Sands, Land from the Sea: A Microhistory of Coastal Land Titling in Thailand

TitleShifting Sands, Land from the Sea: A Microhistory of Coastal Land Titling in Thailand
Annotated RecordNot Annotated
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsKnapp RKuyakanon
Secondary TitleEthnos
Pagination1-21
Key themesAccessToJustice, Dispossession-grabbing, Formalisation-titling, Policy-law
Abstract

This microhistory of a shoreline place in Thailand details the socio-natural process by which a piece of coastal land came to be recognised as private property by the state. It demonstrates that intimate and long-term attention to specificities of how property comes into being has more explanatory power than synoptic theorisations of accumulation and dispossession. Using ethnography, archives and affective co-narration, this paper probes the shifting ground of water and land to show how the fluidity of water plays a key role in the politics and legal procedures of enclosure, and how fluctuating boundaries become an ambiguous arena for property claims contestations amid entanglements of slippery legal semantics. It argues that the expanded notion of agency in the Anthropocene presents new challenges for thinking about property relations, and that thinking from a shoreline place of shifting water-land boundaries engenders novel questions to do with fluid dispossessions at a time of rising oceans.

URLhttps://doi.org/10.1080/00141844.2023.2213852
Availability

Available for download

Countries

Thailand

Document Type

Journal Article