Who Owns England?
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Оглавление
Guy Shrubsole. Who Owns England?
Copyright
Epigraph
INTRODUCTION
1. THIS LAND IS NOT MY LAND
2. ENGLAND’S DARKEST SECRET
3. THE ESTABLISHMENT: CROWN AND CHURCH
4. OLD MONEY
5. NEW MONEY
6. PROPERTY OF THE STATE
7. CORPORATE CAPTURE
8. A PROPERTY-OWNING DEMOCRACY?
9. IN TRUST FOR TOMORROW
10. AN AGENDA FOR ENGLISH LAND REFORM
Who owns England: the summary figures
The scale of inequality in land ownership
Why unequal land ownership is a problem
An agenda for English land reform
1. End the secrecy around land ownership – tell us who owns England
2. Fix the housing crisis: stop landowners hoarding land and leaving homes empty
3. Fix our farming system: stop handouts to wealthy landowners simply for owning land, and farm in harmony with nature
4. Restore nature’s abundance: end unsustainable land uses like grouse shooting, and bring wilderness back to our uplands
5. Abolish the last vestiges of feudalism in our system of land ownership
6. Curb the ways that corporate capitalism uses land to avoid tax and abuses it for short-term profit
7. Stop the fire sale of public sector land and property
8. Give people a stake in the country and let communities take back control of local land
9. Complete the unfinished business of opening up access to England’s green and pleasant land
10. Instigate a new land ethic: that land ownership comes with responsibilities as well as rights
PICTURE SECTION
APPENDICES: FIGURES ON WHO OWNS LAND. Table 1: The size of England – and the rest of the UK’s nations
Table 2: Land owned by the public sector, Crown, Church, and conservation charities
Table 3: Land owned by companies
Table 4: The top 100 landowning companies in England & Wales
Table 5: Land owned by the dukes, and the subsidies they get
Organisations campaigning on land issues
FOOTNOTES
NOTES
INDEX
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
IMAGE CREDITS
About the Author
About the Publisher
Отрывок из книги
Who possesses this landscape?
The man who bought it or I who am possessed by it?
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The local Wildlife Trust protested that the new gravel-extraction plans would lead to the felling of trees, the destruction of ancient woodland and the permanent loss of heathland. As the minister then responsible for wildlife and biodiversity, you might have thought Benyon would have abandoned such plans out of sheer embarrassment. But he pressed on.
This wasn’t the only time Benyon’s landed interests appeared to clash with his ministerial jurisdiction. The MP also owns an 8,000-acre grouse moor in Scotland, and runs a pheasant shoot at Englefield. Coincidentally or not, as wildlife minister he refused to make it a criminal offence to possess the poison carbofuran, which is used by some gamekeepers to kill birds of prey when they are suspected of predating on game birds.
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