hidden
Image Database Export Citations

Menu:

The Enclosure of America

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Freyfogle, Eric T.
dc.date.accessioned 2010-09-22T19:45:31Z
dc.date.available 2010-09-22T19:45:31Z
dc.date.issued 2007 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10535/6365
dc.description.abstract "Legal memory in the United States has largely forgotten that most of America’s landscape was open to public use well into the nineteenth century. Up until the Civil War and even after, landowners in many regions could exclude the public only from lands that they took the time and expense either to fence or cultivate. In the eyes of many, the public held affirmative use rights in these open lands; the landowner’s desire to exclude was irrelevant. This paper explores the range of public uses of lands in early America. It considers how and why enclosure occurred and why historians and legal scholars have largely overlooked this chapter in American history. The answers have to do with shifting ideas about the 'right to property,' with the diminishing force of natural law, with narrowing ideas of liberty, and with ongoing economic and social change, particularly the coming of industrialization and its growing demand for wage labor. On top of these explanations was a general failure of defenders of the open countryside to find legal ways to talk about and structure the public’s use rights. Many states were willing to set aside the common law of trespass, and did so for generations. Yet, defenders of the open countryside never produced an alternative legal vocabulary to protect these public use rights, except in specific, narrow circumstances; they never found a way to incorporate these public use rights into enduring law. Influential judges and treatise writers, largely urban and Eastern, viewed public rural-land rights with contempt. Their interpretation of the situation gained ascendancy by the late nineteenth century, and it has prevailed ever since." en_US
dc.language English en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Illinois Public Law Research Papers, no. 07-10 en_US
dc.subject law--history en_US
dc.subject enclosure--history en_US
dc.subject land tenure and use--history en_US
dc.subject economic reform--history en_US
dc.subject social change--history en_US
dc.title The Enclosure of America en_US
dc.type Working Paper en_US
dc.type.methodology Case Study en_US
dc.coverage.region North America en_US
dc.coverage.country United States en_US
dc.subject.sector History en_US
dc.subject.sector Land Tenure & Use en_US
dc.subject.sector Social Organization en_US


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
The Enclosure of America.pdf 168.4Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following document type(s)

Show simple item record