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100 _aHolder, Jane. and McGillivray, Donald.
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245 _aRecognising an ecological ethic of care in the law of everyday shared spaces
260 _aSocial and Legal Studies: An International Journal
300 _a29(3), Jun, 2020: p. 379-400
520 _aLaw plays a vital role in the life and loss of open shared spaces, used and enjoyed on an everyday basis by local people. In this article, we adopt an analytical framework based on an ethic of care to critique the registration of land as a ‘town or village green’, using the example of an inquiry into the greens status of an ancient woodland. Analysing written and oral witness statements in this inquiry makes clear the centrality of such places in many people’s lives, giving rise to community-based, and forward-looking, interests. However, the legal focus upon quantitative assessments of individuals’ use of land in the recent past means that the prospective consequences of losing such valued areas are currently poorly acknowledged, and accounted for, in the registration process. This leads to the question whether an ethic of care towards everyday shared spaces may be better recognised via more deliberative plan-making regimes.- Reproduced
650 _aDeliberative theories, Ethic of care, Everyday shared spaces, Feminist theories, Knowledge claims, Local greens, Witness statements
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773 _aSocial and Legal Studies: An International Journal
906 _aECOLOGY
942 _cAR