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Property, Rights, and Freedom*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 June 2009
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William Perm summarized the Magna Carta thus: “First, It asserts Englishmen to be free; that's Liberty. Secondly, they that have free-holds, that's Property.” Since at least the seventeenth century, liberals have not only understood liberty and property to be fundamental, but to be somehow intimately related or interwoven. Here, however, consensus ends; liberals present an array of competing accounts of the relation between liberty and property. Many, for instance, defend an essentially instrumental view, typically seeing private property as justified because it is necessary to maintain or protect other, more basic, liberty rights. Important to our constitutional tradition has been the idea that “[t]he right to property is the guardian of every other right, and to deprive a people of this, is in fact to deprive them of their liberty.” Along similar lines, it has been argued that only an economic system based on private property disperses power and resources, ensuring that private people in civil society have the resources to oppose the state and give effect to basic liberties. Alternatively, it is sometimes claimed that only those with property develop the independent characters that are necessary to preserve a regime of liberty. But not only have liberals insisted that, property is a means of preserving liberty, they have often conceived of it as an embodiment of liberty, or as a type of liberty, or indeed as identical to liberty. This latter view is popular among contemporary libertarians or classical liberals. Jan Narveson, for instance, bluntly asserts that “Liberty is Property,” while John Gray insists that “[t]he connection between property and the basic liberties is constitutive and not just instrumental.”
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One belief, more than any other, is responsible for the slaughter of individuals on the altars of the great historical ideals—justice or progress or the happiness of future generations, or the sacred mission or emancipation of a nation or race or class, or even liberty itself, which demands the sacrifice of individuals for the freedom of society. This is the belief that somewhere, in the past or the future, in divine revelation or in the mind of an individual thinker, in the pronouncements of history or science, or in the simple heart of the uncorrupted good man, there is a final solution. This ancient faith rests on the conviction that all positive values in which men have believed must, in the end, be compatible, and perhaps even entail one another.
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61 Stephen Munzer alerts me that, if this is to be legally binding, the permission must be in writing to satisfy the Statute of Frauds, and must satisfy the legal criteria for valid servitudes.
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110 See Dworkin, Ronald, Taking Rights SeriouslyGoogle Scholar, ch. 7; and Ewin, R. E., Liberty, Community, and Justice (Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Littlefield, 1987)Google Scholar. Cf. Raz, Joseph, The Morality of Freedom (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986), pp. 256–57.Google Scholar
111 As Buckle shows, seventeenth-century usage closely linked the ideas of suum, property, and what was properly one's own-“propriety”; see Buckle, , Natural Law and the Theory of Property (supra note 47), pp. 172–73.Google Scholar
112 Note that this same general idea has been used to describe rights in general, property rights, and rights of privacy. Stanley Benn, for instance, speaks of a “conception of privacy … closely bound to the liberal ideal. The totalitarian claims that everything a person is and does has significance for society at large. He sees the state as the self-conscious organization of civil society, existing for society's well-being. The public or political universe is all-inclusive: all roles are public….” See Benn, , A Theory of Freedom (supra note 8), p. 268Google Scholar. This is by no means to say that these three concepts are identical, but insofar as each identifies an area that is not subject to public interference or scrutiny, they all articulate requirements of a free life, and often are run together. For an analysis of the difference between property and privacy, see Munzer, , A Theory of Property (supra note 23), pp. 46, 92, 95, 99Google Scholar. See also Hayek, F. A., The Constitution of Liberty (London: Routledge, 1960), p. 140.Google Scholar
113 Reich, , “The New Property” (supra note 93), pp. 771ff.Google Scholar
114 Cf. the conception of freedom as extent of sovereignty in Section IIIE.
115 Berlin, , “Two Concepts of Liberty” (supra note 9), p. 125.Google Scholar
116 Or so I have argued; see my Value and Justification, ch. 8.
117 Note that this is how Sumner defines libertarianism: “Libertarianism as a moral/political theory is based on the contention that natural rights are all liberty-rights (or property rights)” (Sumner, , The Moral Foundation of Rights, p. 110).Google Scholar
118 Berlin, , “Two Concepts of Liberty,” p. 169.Google Scholar
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