Contents
Post-socialist
Property in Asia and Europe: Variations on 'Fuzziness'
Janet C. Sturgeon and Thomas Sikor
This
introduction contextualises the set of articles included in this
issue and discusses their contribution to understanding the observed
'fuzziness' of property in post-socialist contexts. Katherine Verdery,
among others, has highlighted ambiguity, or 'fuzziness', as a key
feature of post-socialist property relations. Property rights in
practice are often quite different from the neo-liberal notion of
exclusive, private property promoted in post-socialist property
reforms. This introduction highlights the reasons for fuzziness
identified in individual articles and contrasts them with the overlapping
and flexible property relations reported from post-colonial arenas
in Africa and Asia. It concludes that post socialist fuzzy property
is similiar to post-colonial ambiguous property relations in many
respects. The feature setting the former apart is the 'lack of routinized
rules and crystallized practices of exclusion and inclusion' (Verdery
1999: 55). The ruptures caused by large-scale economic, political
and cultural trnasformations were rapid and destabilising, throwing
property, identity and sozial relations up in the air, and opening
up considerable room for manipulation. Local elite found themselves
operating in somewhat of a vacuum and quickly asserted control over
productive resources or the processes allocating them.
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