Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T16:04:54.511Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Contesting the property paradigm amid ‘radical’ constitutional change: Living Rent and the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 March 2024

Mark Jordan*
Affiliation:
University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

This paper examines the interaction between ‘radical’ constitutional change, in the form of political devolution, and property systems in the UK, from the perspective of those at the margins of those systems. The paper adopts a property ‘from below’ approach and critically applies the theoretical framework developed by AJ van der Walt in Property in the Margins. In that book, van der Walt outlined how property systems frequently operate to resist democratic and constitutional change and transformation through the functioning of the property paradigm, which refers to a set of doctrinal, rhetorical, and logical assumptions and beliefs about the relative value and power of discrete property interests in law and in society. Building on van der Walt's work, this paper takes eviction, which represents the landlord's apex right, as a case study and considers how qualifications of that right have been reformed by the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016. It is argued that while the strength of the property paradigm is apparent in both English and Scottish property systems, Living Rent, a national tenants’ union in Scotland, have organised tenants to effectively contest and, in some respects, displace the logic of the property paradigm during the reform process.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Society of Legal Scholars

Introduction

This paper examines the interaction between ‘radical’ constitutional change in the form of political devolution, and property systems in the UK. The paper adopts a law ‘from below’ approach for this purpose which draws on AJ van der Walt's book Property in the Margins.Footnote 1 In that study of property in post-apartheid South Africa, van der Walt demonstrated how rich theoretical and practical insights can be revealed by analysing a property system in times of constitutional change from the perspective of those on the margins of that system. His analysis revealed how property systems frequently operate to resist democratically sanctioned and constitutionally mandated change and transformation through the functioning of the property paradigm, which refers to a set of doctrinal, rhetorical, and logical assumptions and beliefs about the relative value and power of discrete property interests in the law and in society.Footnote 2

This paper critically applies van der Walt's theoretical framework in a UK context to analyse how statutory qualifications of the private landlord's right to possession, the apex property right, have been reformed in Scotland following a process of ‘radical’ constitutional change in the form of political devolution. My mission differs from van der Walt's in that this paper is not seeking to test whether there has been delivery of the constitutional promise of the 1998 devolution settlement for those ‘at the margins’; it is instead concerned with how those with ‘lesser rights’ have effectively contested – and, in some respects, displaced – the logic of the property paradigm in Scotland post-1998.

This paper demonstrates that the property paradigm is a feature of the property systems of England and Scotland and that it was substantially entrenched by the Housing Act 1988 and Housing (Scotland) Act 1988 which set in place a common private tenancy regime. While constitutional change created new potential for the various governments of the UK to break with that regime, it is argued that only in Scotland have qualifications to the landlord's right to possession been expanded in a way that significantly undermines the property paradigm. The Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016 (as amended) abolished no-fault evictions, made all grounds for eviction discretionary and introduced indefinite tenancies, variable notice periods and rent controls in so-called rent pressure zones. The central argument presented here is that this reform cannot be fully understood without taking account of how Living Rent, a national tenants’ union, organised those with ‘lesser rights’ to engage with the law reform process to effectively challenge the logic of the property paradigm and strengthen housing rights for tenants.

Although there are excellent accounts of the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016, there has been little attention paid to the role which Living Rent played during the law reform process.Footnote 3 This paper addresses a gap in the literature by shedding light on how Living Rent engaged with the Scottish government consultation mechanism as part of its campaign to expand housing rights for tenants. This is a novel analysis because, although law-making powers over property and housing have been devolved since 1998, the impact of this ‘radical’ constitutional change on property and housing systems in the UK remains relatively unexplored and undertheorised.Footnote 4 Tenancy reform is a live issue and this paper sheds light on the different legal measures that have been introduced post-1998 in response to the housing insecurity that is an all too common feature of private renting across the UK.Footnote 5 This issue has assumed greater significance over the past two decades due to the revival of private renting, which has doubled in size across the UK and accommodates a fifth of all households.Footnote 6 Indeed, the private rented sector is central to the contemporary housing crisis because it is the most expensive, insecure and unsafe housing in each part of the UK.Footnote 7

The central argument is developed across the following structure. Part 1 draws on approaches to law ‘from below’ to set out the analytical framework. After critically engaging with the theoretical framework developed in Property in the Margins, it is argued that valuable insights can be generated by adapting that framework to analyse how legislation can entrench the property paradigm and to take account of how social movements, namely tenants’ unions, can contest the property paradigm. Part 2 demonstrates that the property paradigm functioned in a similar way in England and Scotland in relation to the law governing eviction of private tenants and that it was entrenched by the Housing Act 1988 and Housing (Scotland) Act 1988.Footnote 8 This section outlines how the revival of private renting occurred across the UK in parallel to a process of ‘radical’ constitutional change, in the form of political devolution, which transformed the legal response to the emerging crisis in the private rented sector. The section then identifies how the Scottish reforms are distinctive when compared to the post-1998 reforms of tenancy law in England and Wales which have retained core aspects of the Housing Act 1988. In part 3, the passage of the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016 is analysed in granular detail to shed light on the important role played by Living Rent in politicising the law reform process, contesting the property paradigm, and campaigning for greater qualifications of the landlord's right to possession.

1. Property, housing, and constitutional change ‘from below’

(a) Law ‘from below’

In recent years, there has been growing interest in approaches to law ‘from below’.Footnote 9 Such approaches provide a method with which to decentre dominant, often Western, accounts of the law and legal change and reveal valuable insights into how law relates to the ‘base’ and how resistance to law by marginalised and exploited communities and peoples can shape its development.Footnote 10 As Oliver De Shutter and Balakrishnan Rajagopal explain, ‘a central element of such approaches … is the role of social movements and dissident understandings and ideas and to reinterpret them as being more central to the understanding of law and social sciences’.Footnote 11

Although well established in other areas of law, approaches ‘from below’ are relatively underdeveloped in property scholarship.Footnote 12 Instead, much of mainstream property law and scholarship is dominated by a centrality focus that assigns the status of having property to the centre and relegates not having property to the margins of social normality.Footnote 13 This arguably reflects the pervasive influence of economic liberalism in Anglo-American and European civil law property systems which accords ownership a central place through its importance in underpinning the free market economy and because it is assumed to enhance personal and civil liberty.Footnote 14 Indeed, as Eduardo Peñalver and Sonia Katyal point out, property scholarship often takes a particularly dim view of those on the margins who refuse to abide in the conventional property structures and roles of mainstream society because such ‘property outlaws’ are perceived as a threat to how a stable system of private ownership maintains social order.Footnote 15

Such attitudes and approaches are unfortunate because they narrow the frame through which a property system can be analysed, thereby limiting ways of understanding power, privilege and status in law and society.Footnote 16 This in turn serves to both explain and help to justify the unequal distribution of property and power in society.Footnote 17 Such approaches also tend to overlook the important role which social movements have played in contesting and shaping property systems and thus can relegate and diminish the agency and voice of those who are subject to the strong property rights of others.

In recent years, there has been increasing academic interest in approaches ‘from below’ to property. In Property Rights from Below, De Shutter and Rajagopal present a diverse set of essays which seek to challenge the growing sanctification of a Western understanding of property rights.Footnote 18 These essays critique dominant conceptions of property rights and reveal how while the legal framework can facilitate the commodification of land it can also enable the ‘shift away from privatisation and commodification and toward the revival of the commons’.Footnote 19 These studies illustrate how although property law aims to enhance stability it also engenders ‘cultural and political forces that contest and destabilise, creating chaos and confusion in the midst of seeming orderliness’.Footnote 20

These studies complement a growing body of scholarship in the field of housing where various scholars have rejected the centrality focus that dominates much of mainstream legal scholarship by theorising property and housing ‘with reference to the actual experiences of those who find themselves on the margins of society and of property distribution patterns’.Footnote 21 This scholarship ‘from below’ has both tested how housing and property systems work from the perspective of housing/property outsidersFootnote 22 and shed light on how those subject to the strong property rights of others have organised collectively to form social movements to contest dominant property modelsFootnote 23 and bring about a more egalitarian housing system.Footnote 24

This paper aims to contribute to this scholarship by analysing how private renting legislation in Great Britain (England, Scotland, Wales) has privileged the strong property rights of landlords and thereby facilitated the marginalisation of tenants. It is argued that following ‘radical’ constitutional change in the form of political devolution, tenants in Scotland have effectively challenged dominant property structures by forming tenants’ unions to contest Scottish renting reforms and secure greater housing rights for tenants.

This paper adapts AJ van der Walt's Property in the Margins (2009) as a theoretical framework for this purpose. In that book, van der Walt's mission was to test whether there had been delivery of the constitutional promise in post-apartheid South Africa.Footnote 25 To do this, he developed a perspective with which to reflect on a property system, in times of constitutional change, that sought to take seriously the property experiences of people who exist on the ‘margins of society’.Footnote 26 His primary focus was on investigating legal and judicial reactions to anti-eviction legislation and constitutional provisions that were designed to protect those with lesser rights (tenants) or no rights (occupiers).Footnote 27

Although van der Walt recognised the importance of collective action, his mission differs from mine in that he did not primarily engage with how those with ‘lesser rights’ can form social movements to contest the process of legislative change to curtail the strong property rights of landlords. Nevertheless, van der Walt's model is particularly suitable for this project.Footnote 28 This is because it provides a novel means of analysing property and housing systems not from the centre, but from the perspective of those who are subject to the strong property rights of others. In addition, it provides an adaptable framework for explaining broad trends in tenants’ rights without getting bogged down in technical detail. Finally, it provides a means of assessing the impact of different forms of constitutional change on various property systems. This makes it particularly suitable for this project which analyses legal developments made possible by a process of constitutional change in the form of political devolution.

(b) The property paradigm

The thesis advanced in Property in the Margins is that a property regime will tend to insulate itself against change, including democratic and constitutional change and transformation, ‘through the security and stability seeking tendency of tradition and legal culture, including the deep assumptions about security and stability’ embedded in what van der Walt refers to as the property rights paradigm.Footnote 29 He contends that this process becomes acutely apparent when one reflects on a property system from the perspective of those on the margins of that system.

The term property paradigm refers to the doctrinal framework within which property interests are considered and this is ‘depicted as a set of doctrinal, rhetorical and logical assumptions and beliefs about the relative value and power of discrete property interests in the law and in society’.Footnote 30 Within this paradigm, property interests are mainly valued according to their status as property rights, personal rights or no-rights, and also as strong rights, weak rights, or no-rights.

The two most significant features of the property paradigm are that property interests are ordered hierarchically, in the sense that strong property rights – such as ownership or the right to possession – are more important than lesser or no property rights, and abstractly, such that conflicts between interests are decided according to doctrinal rhetoric and logic and without reference to the wider context or the personal circumstances of the parties. The result is that the paradigm tends to justify ‘the more or less automatic rights-based (and often ownership biased) outcome of particular property disputes’.Footnote 31

These features cannot be explained as the inevitable result of legal tradition or doctrine. Instead, van der Walt explains that the property paradigm is underpinned by a set of socio-political and socio-economic assumptions about the central role of property in individual lives and in society. Although often unarticulated by scholars and courts, he identifies how these assumptions are consistent with core tenets of political and economic liberalism, including individual self-determination, rational maximisation of personal preferences and the free market.Footnote 32

The strength of the property paradigm gives rise to a series of important legal and social consequences. Even where ownership (or the right to possession) is restricted by constitutional or statutory measures, for instance to protect occupiers from eviction, such measures often fail to ‘overcome the rhetorical power of the ideal notion of ownership presented by the rights paradigm in its abstract or absolute form’.Footnote 33 This rhetoric presents ownership (or the right to possession) as the apex right and insists that restrictions on such rights must be exceptional, carefully justified and ultimately should fall away over time until ownership eventually resumes its natural ‘fullness’.Footnote 34

One of the paradigm's most important features is how it imparts a centrality-marginality logic that pervades the property system and determines how people and interests are treated within that system and in society. Van der Walt elaborates this through a contextual analysis which recognises that property systems reflect their accompanying economic, social, and political system. Accordingly, within liberal Western systems, private property is privileged because of its importance in the free market economy.Footnote 35 Thus, ownership and the rights of owners are treated as being central and normal. By contrast, the status of having lesser forms of property or not having property at all is relegated to the margins of social normality.Footnote 36

Van der Walt rejected such approaches and instead sought to imagine a perspective that takes seriously the interests of those who are subject to the property rights of others. He contended that this required placing greater weight on the social position, economic status and personal circumstances of the parties involved in property relations or disputes and placing less weight on their legal status.Footnote 37

Analysing a property system in this way reveals how the property paradigm inherently privileges individual property rights against democratically sanctioned change including forms of regulatory state control. In doing so, it tends to stabilise the pre-existing distribution of property in society by securing current property holdings, as they are assumed to be lawfully acquired, socially important and politically legitimate.Footnote 38 Hence, in a society riven by inequality, the property paradigm can operate to frustrate social and economic reforms, thereby entrenching and exacerbating existing inequalities.

Van der Walt argued that one could assess the strength of the property paradigm in a system by analysing the extent to which legal restrictions on the landowner's right to possession (the apex property right) tend to undermine the paradigm. He found that although such restrictions are common in a landlord and tenant context in South Africa, England and Germany, even quite dramatic restrictions mostly failed to undermine the hierarchical power of the landowner's property rights.Footnote 39 This was because most legislative interventions amounted to little more than basic due process controls on eviction (eg limited grounds for possession, notice requirements, narrow forms of judicial supervision), that usually turn on factors that are within the landowner's control and which do not place any special emphasis on the personal or social circumstances of the occupier or the wider context.Footnote 40

By contrast, there were only isolated instances where controls imposed on the landowner's right to possession provide for context-sensitive adjudication where the judicial officer exercises a broad discretion that may prevent ownership from trumping non-ownership interests as a result of the wider context and/or personal circumstances of the tenant or occupier.Footnote 41 Where such protections exist, van der Walt pointed out that they are often met with staunch resistance because they threaten to undermine the integrity of the paradigm and represent a challenge to established power hierarchies. Consequently, they are either ‘restricted in scope or are being eroded by changing economic policies’; in effect they are minimised by hesitant and sceptical judiciaries and by the doctrinal conservativism of scholars.Footnote 42

(c) Contesting the property paradigm

While recognising the exceptionally valuable insights generated in van der Walt's work, this paper critically adapts his theoretical framework to take account of the following limitations and argues that tenants in Scotland have effectively challenged, and in some respects displaced, the logic of the property paradigm by forming tenant unions and contesting law reform in Scotland.

The first limitation concerns how van der Walt focuses mainly on legal measures that qualify the property paradigm, namely procedural and substantive constraints on the landlord's right to possession, and then investigates legal and judicial reactions to those qualifications. This focus reflects van der Walt's mission, which was to test whether there had been delivery of the constitutional promise in post-apartheid South Africa. While he acknowledges that legislation can reinforce the paradigm for ideological and political purposes, such as in South Africa where statutory measures reinforced the landowner's right to possession in order to promote the exclusionary racial politics of the apartheid government, he pays much less analytical attention to how legislation can reinforce the property paradigm.Footnote 43 Yet if the property paradigm condemns some to the margins of social normality, then legal measures that reinforce that paradigm are likely to compound existing inequalities and so are worthy of greater attention. Accordingly, in the next section, van der Walt's property paradigm framing is used to show that the property paradigm exists in England and Scotland and that it was reinforced by legislation, in the form of the Housing Act 1988.

Next, van der Walt sought to assess the strength of the paradigm by analysing judicial reactions to constitutional and legal measures designed to protect those with weak or no rights against eviction. This is an important focus; however, he paid relatively little attention to how these measures were often developed through a highly contested law-making process.Footnote 44 This process can produce law and policy that can either reinforce and entrench the property paradigm or curtail and undermine it. The inherent contestability of this process explains why, as Fox-O'Mahony and Roark point out, ‘aggregated communities’, such as tenant unions or landlord associations, seek to influence state law and policy.Footnote 45 Focusing on how such aggregated communities engage with the law-making process can shed light on legislative challenges to the paradigm. This study examines how political devolution produced a new site of political contestation, namely the Scottish Parliament, and considers how Living Rent engaged with the Scottish law-making process to make renting law work for those ‘at the margins’.

The final limitation of van der Walt's analysis relates to how he sought to ‘imagine’ a perspective from the margins.Footnote 46 To his credit, he recognised that social movements can be an important agent for legal and political change but he did not engage with the rich history of collective tenant organising to contest the strong property rights of landlords.Footnote 47 Yet by taking account of the actual practices of social movements of those with lesser rights that seek to challenge the property paradigm, it is argued that one can develop a more concrete perspective of those with lesser rights, than simply imagining such a perspective in the abstract.

There has been growing academic attention paid to struggles by social movements over housing – see for example Ireland,Footnote 48 Brazil,Footnote 49 England.Footnote 50 A recurring feature of these particular struggles is the central role of rights talk and practices. This tends to be used in both an expressive sense, to constitute the movement's collective identify and struggle (eg resisting the financialisation of housing), and in an instrumental sense, to set out a specific aim or demand (eg universal public housing).Footnote 51 While social movements sometimes employ housing rights in highly legalistic ways (eg strategic litigation),Footnote 52 they frequently conceptualise rights in broader, egalitarian and profoundly political ways to critique, challenge, and imagine alternatives to, the housing crisis.Footnote 53 In doing so, they express a collective voice and agency that offers valuable insights into how the property and housing system functions from the perspective of those with ‘lesser’ rights. This paper develops one such perspective by analysing how Living Rent organised tenants to contest the passage of the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016 and secure greater housing rights for tenants.

2. The property paradigm, private renting, and ‘radical’ constitutional change in the UK

(a) Assessing the strength of the property paradigm

This section demonstrates that the property paradigm is a feature of the property systems in England and Scotland and argues that the strength of the paradigm, as it operated in the private rented sector, was substantially reinforced by the Housing Act 1988. This vitally important statute applied across Great Britain and set in place a common statutory tenancy regime that was inherited by the devolved governments in Scotland and Wales following the 1998 devolution settlement.Footnote 54

It is important to make clear that there is no UK property law or UK housing law. Rather, the UK is the site of three legal jurisdictions encompassing: Scotland; Northern Ireland; and England and Wales. Although Senedd Cymru (the Welsh Parliament) have introduced distinctive renting reforms which, as discussed below, apply in Wales, England and Wales still share a single legal jurisdiction.Footnote 55 Each jurisdiction has its own property law system and there are significant technical differences between these systems.Footnote 56 These technical differences have become more marked with political devolution, which has generated a remarkable volume of housing legislation since 1998. Of course, such differences present no special obstacle to comparative analysis.Footnote 57 This study follows van der Walt's approach and first identifies the strong property rights of the owner to evict a private tenant in both systems and then assesses how these rights are qualified by residential renting statutes.

To begin with, Scots law is a hybrid legal system and so its property law has both common law and civil law heritage. The civil law influence is particularly apparent in how in Scottish property law, ownership is understood as a singular, unitary and absolute right which provides the owner of land with certain rights of use, enjoyment, and disposal.Footnote 58 By contrast, property law in England and Wales, reflecting its common law heritage, does not have the same concept of absolute ownership or dominium.Footnote 59 Instead, it is organised around the doctrine of estates. This defines a set of exclusive possession and use rights over land for different periods of time.Footnote 60 The basic distinction is between the freehold estate, which is indefinite, and leasehold, which is time limited.Footnote 61

Despite these technical differences, there is strong functional similarity in the role played by the right of ownership in Scottish law and the right to possession in England and Wales. Using van der Walt's terminology, in both systems these rights constitute the apex property right which confers on the owner strong property rights that, in principle, will trump lesser property rights or no property rights where a conflict occurs.

In addition to this functional similarity, there has long been strong similarity in the statutory qualifications of those strong property rights that stem from residential renting law. This reflects how key statutes applied, more or less uniformly, across Great Britain for well over a century prior to the 1998 devolution settlement.Footnote 62 Over time, these statutory measures came to govern many important aspects of the landlord and tenant relationship (eg termination, rent, repair).

The strong similarity in the interaction of these qualifications with the strong property rights of landlords is well illustrated in the case of eviction. In principle, the landlord has a strong right to possession that will trump the lesser rights of a renter. However, that strong right is subject to procedural and other qualifications as provided in residential landlord and tenant statutes. These statutes have tended to provide that contractual termination rights are subject to a statutory scheme, that formal notice must be given to end a tenancy, a recognised reason for termination must be given, and evictions are subject to judicial supervision.Footnote 63

For over a century, the statutory qualifications of the landlord's strong property rights have been expanded and contracted as the political fortunes of landlords and tenants have waxed and waned.Footnote 64 However, the critical point is that until the devolution settlement in 1998 this process has unfolded in much the same way in Great Britain. This is clearly illustrated by the Housing Act 1988, which deregulated the private rented sector as part of a neoliberal project to return the tenancy regime to being governed by market forces.Footnote 65

Rejecting the strong qualifications of the landlord's right to possession contained in the Rent Act 1977 and Rent (Scotland) Act 1984, the drafters of the Housing Act 1988 presented a new vision for private renting which was ‘very much to do with its immediate access characteristics and its ability to facilitate labour mobility’.Footnote 66 In this vision, ownership was presented as the natural or normal tenure of choice and the individual private renter was reimagined as a transitional household, moving through the sector rather than making a home there.Footnote 67 Strong qualifications of the landlord's property rights were presented as unnecessary encumbrances that both undermined the function of housing as an economic asset and restricted labour mobility.Footnote 68

The Housing Act 1988 applied to all new tenancies, unless excluded, which would be either assured tenancies, the default tenancy modelled on the protected tenancy, or assured shortholds (AST)/short assured tenancies (SAT) in Scotland, a low-security variant of the assured tenancy.Footnote 69 The assured tenancy retained many of the existing qualifications of the landlord's right to possession. Thus any contractual term or termination right was subject to the statutory regime, which provides a set of defined grounds for possession, succession rights, formal notice requirements, and that a court order was required to end a tenancy and evict a tenant.Footnote 70 One subtle, but significant, change was the expansion in the range of mandatory grounds for possession, most notable for rent arrears, which had been a discretionary ground under the previous regime.Footnote 71

The impact of the protections provided under the assured tenancy was substantively reduced by the AST/SAT. The defining feature of this tenancy was that after expiry of a six-month period, it could be ended by notice without the landlord having to give a reason.Footnote 72 While it remained the case that the landlord must obtain a court order, the notice-only ground of possession was mandatory and so the court was compelled to order possession once the ground was established and it had no capacity to consider the wider context or individual circumstances of the tenant.Footnote 73 To further expedite the landlord gaining possession, an accelerated possession procedure was introduced, which allowed the landlord to obtain an order for possession without a court hearing.Footnote 74

In summary, the Housing Act 1988 interacted with the property paradigm in two different but related ways. On one hand, it provided a range of formal qualifications on the landlord's right to possession. However, on the other, it substantially reworked those qualifications such that they would facilitate, rather than protect against, evictions by the landlord. The net effect was a dramatic entrenchment of the property paradigm as part of broader ideological project to commodify rented housing and this occurred across Scotland, England and Wales in much the same way.

(b) The revival of private renting amid ‘radical’ constitutional change

Deregulation did not produce an immediate change in the fortunes of private renting. Indeed, it was a decade later when the first signs of a revival of private renting became apparent. This development reflects a range of demand and supply factors that extend beyond the Housing Act 1988.Footnote 75 Nevertheless, by enabling landlords to set rents as they please and evict tenants with relative ease, it helped to create conditions that were favourable for speculative investment. The subsequent introduction of buy-to-let mortgages in the mid-1990s, made more attractive by tax reliefs and rent subsidies, generated a flood of investment and the sector more than doubled in size in England, Wales and Scotland from 1998 to 2018.Footnote 76

Much of the demand for private renting has stemmed from the growing numbers of households priced out of ownership or faced with growing social housing waiting lists.Footnote 77 In the process, more households have been channelled towards the AST/SAT tenancy regime which privileged the property rights of landlords above most other considerations. This exposed many households to insecurity, in the form of ‘no-fault’ evictions, unaffordable rents and relatively poorer housing conditions.Footnote 78 By the late 2000s, there were clear signs across Great Britain of an emerging crisis of insecurity and unaffordability in the ‘revived’ private rented sector.Footnote 79

The revival of private renting, and the emerging crisis, occurred in a radically changed UK constitutional landscape. The 1998 devolution settlement set in place a process of political devolution, involving the transfer of law-making power from the centre (UK Parliament) to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.Footnote 80 Although a process of devolution has been ongoing in different forms since the eighteenth century, the scale of the transfer of legislative powers under the 1998 devolution settlement was exceptional.Footnote 81 The settlement involved the establishment of governmental institutions, with law-making powers in certain policy areas, in Scotland and Wales, and the re-establishment of governmental institutions, under different arrangements, in Northern Ireland. The process was designed to deliver a new style of politics that would reduce the democratic deficit associated with London rule by ensuring that political decisions would be made as close as possible to the citizen.Footnote 82

Devolution has been described by Vernon Bogdanor as ‘the most radical constitutional change’ in the UK in almost two centuries.Footnote 83 For Bogdanor, the radical nature of devolution here lay in how it sought to ‘reconcile two seemingly conflicting principles, the sovereignty or supremacy of Parliament and the grant of self-government in domestic affairs to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland’.Footnote 84 Despite the scale of legislative devolution, the 1998 settlement did not turn the UK into a federal state. Rather, as Mark Elliott explains, ‘one of the hallmarks of devolution is that the national legislature, far from transferring legislative competence, merely shares such competence with devolved institutions’.Footnote 85 The devolved institutions owe their legal existence to legislation enacted by the UK Parliament, which can, as a matter of strict law, repeal or extinguish those institutions. Indeed, the UK Parliament retains the right to legislate in all areas relating to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. However, by convention, the UK Parliament will not normally legislate on devolved matters except with the consent of the devolved legislature.Footnote 86

Although the institutional framework was set in place in 1998, devolution has proved to be a process rather than an event, and the devolution settlement has been amended substantially and a greater range of powers have been devolved over time.Footnote 87 Another defining feature of political devolution has been its asymmetrical nature. The Scottish Parliament, Senedd Cymru, and the Northern Ireland Assembly differ in size, composition, electoral system, devolved powers and in their system of government.Footnote 88 There are various structural limitations that stem from the devolution settlement and which, amongst other things, determine how the devolved administrations are funded by the UK Parliament. A detailed discussion of these matters is beyond the scope of this paper and can be found elsewhere.Footnote 89 The crucial point, for present purposes, is that despite the asymmetries in institutional design and the various structural limitations, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland all possess executive and legislative powers in relation to housing and this has transformed the law and policy response to the crisis in the private rented sector.

(c) Devolved reforms of the private tenancy regime

The impact of political devolution is particularly apparent in the case of housing law, where the Scottish Parliament, Senedd Cymru, and the Northern Ireland Assembly all enjoy broad legislative competence.Footnote 90 They have each introduced a range of housing law reforms in response to the revival of private renting, and the problems of insecurity and unaffordability associated with that sector. During the same period, the Westminster Parliament, legislating for England, has also introduced various reforms. In England, Scotland and Wales, reformers have introduced or proposed different reforms to the private tenancy regime under the Housing Act 1988.

Despite the various technical differences of these reforms, there is a strong degree of substantive continuity in how core aspects of the previous tenancy regime, relating to evictions and rent setting, have been retained in Wales and England; it is only in Scotland that a substantive break has occurred in these areas. This is an important policy difference and is not simply a matter of timing, particularly since the Welsh and English reforms took place after the Scottish reforms.

Perhaps the most technically distinctive reform was introduced by the Welsh Labour government.Footnote 91 The Welsh reform was not primarily motivated with addressing insecurity or unaffordability, but rather was mainly driven by a concern to simplify and modernise the law, which was seen as overly complex.Footnote 92 To meet this aim, the Welsh reforms introduced statutorily regulated contracts to be used by all rental providers, unless excluded.Footnote 93 This change was accompanied by a raft of consumerist measures, including tenant information rights, simplified notices, and the provision of mandatory written contracts.Footnote 94

Despite these changes, strong substantive continuity was apparent in how the standard contract used in the private rented sector was modelled on the assured shorthold. Thus, the notice-only ground for possession, which allows ‘no-fault’ evictions’, was retained in Wales.Footnote 95 Likewise, the central role of mandatory grounds for possession was preserved for both the notice-only ground and serious rent arrears.Footnote 96 Finally, the Welsh reforms have not disturbed the market rent model that was central to the previous regime. Indeed, the Welsh reforms go further than the Housing Act 1988 by not including any restrictions on the setting of excessive rents.Footnote 97

Reformers in England have proposed, but not yet implemented, major reforms of the private tenancy regime. As early as 2019, the Conservative government proposed abolishing ‘no-fault’ evictions because of concern over its ‘unethical’ use for retaliatory evictions.Footnote 98 While this commitment was initially included in the Renters (Reform) Bill 2023, it was subsequently postponed, apparently indefinitely, pending reform of the courts system.Footnote 99 Strong continuity is apparent in the other provisions of the Renters (Reform) Bill 2023, which do not disturb the market rent regime and indeed seek to expand the role of mandatory groups of possession to include sale and a new rent arrears ground.Footnote 100 If implemented as presently designed, the English reforms would further entrench the property paradigm.

By contrast, the Scottish reforms, discussed below, are distinctive because of the extent to which they expand qualifications of the landlord's right to possession and set rents, thereby marking a clear break with central tenets of the Housing Act 1988. The Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016 (as amended) abolished no-fault evictions, made all grounds for eviction discretionary and introduced indefinite tenancies, variable notice periods and rent controls in so-called rent pressure zones. There are excellent accounts of this Act which shed light on its content.Footnote 101 There have also been insightful comparative studies of post-1998 renting reforms in the UK. These accounts tend to explain the Scottish reforms as the inevitable result of devolution or attribute the nature of the reforms to the housing politics of elite political actors, namely the Scottish National Party (SNP).Footnote 102 While these are important factors, they do not provide a convincing explanation for why the Scottish reforms went further in expanding qualifications of landlord's property rights.

It is argued that the highly politicised reform process, from which the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016 emerged, is a vitally important factor in the development of this significant legal difference and that this process cannot be fully understood without taking account of the important role played by social movements of tenants in politicising that process and contesting the acceptable parameters of reform. Through a granular analysis of the passage of the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016, the next section reveals how Living Rent organised tenants to contest and politicise reform. In doing so, they effectively displaced dominant narratives that presented reform as a technocratic modernisation exercise that did not require dramatic changes to the balance of power in the landlord-tenant relationship. In this way, Living Rent's campaigns effectively challenged the property paradigm and made a case for expanding qualifications of the landlord's right to possession.

3. Contesting the property paradigm in Scotland

(a) The rise of Living Rent

The UK housing crisis has taken on a particular dimension in Scottish cities. Historically, Scotland was the site of the most extensive commitment to public housing in the UK. In parts of Glasgow, more than half of the housing stock was public rented housing and it effectively competed with, and displaced, the market for housing for rent or ownership.Footnote 103 However, in a few short decades, the situation was transformed by the right to buy and deregulation of renting. Consequently, the general problems associated with the housing crisis across the UK, including the shortage of social housing, housing cost inflation, evictions and poor-quality housing, are present in Scottish cities.Footnote 104

These conditions have proved fertile ground for the development of movements of resistance to the housing crisis. One such movement is Living Rent, a national tenant union, that was formed in 2016 around a popular campaign centred on the Scottish government consultation on tenancy reform in 2014.Footnote 105 Living Rent defines itself as a tenant union that is committed to fostering ‘solidaristic mass movements around private and social housing across Scotland’ and fighting for ‘tenants’ rights and decent and affordable housing for all’.Footnote 106

Although Living Rent began from a campaign around law reform, and housing rights talk is central to how they constitute their collective identity and struggles, they do not limit themselves to narrow, legalistic aims or methods. Rather, they aspire to a more ambitious and explicitly egalitarian future in which the role of the private market is diminished and public housing is available to all.Footnote 107 In much the same way, they conceptualise the right to housing in expansive, political and egalitarian ways that extend beyond dominant legal institutional conceptions.Footnote 108 For Living Rent, the right to housing is not merely about realising minimum legal protections but instead involves a profoundly political commitment to challenging the neoliberal commodification of housing while advocating for the primacy of the social function of housing as a home.Footnote 109

To realise their aims Living Rent use a range of tactics including conventional lobbying as well as direct action to defend against evictions and poor housing.Footnote 110 This paper is focused on how Living Rent have used Scottish government consultations as part of their campaigns for tenants’ rights. Although Living Rent do not use the terminology of the property paradigm, their campaigns clearly aim to contest that paradigm, as entrenched by the Housing (Scotland) Act 1988, and bring about greater qualifications on the landlord's property rights.

From the outset, Living Rent campaigners identified the tenancy regime under the Housing (Scotland) Act 1988 as being central to the housing crisis. Living Rent rejected the legal-liberal conceptualisation of the landlord-tenant relationship as simply a private contractual relationship between individuals with equal bargaining power.Footnote 111 Instead, Living Rent presented the landlord-tenant relationship as inherently exploitive and based on the fundamental imbalance of economic power between the landlord, who owns scarce residential housing as an investment asset, and the tenant, who needs a home.Footnote 112

Living Rent argued that the tenancy regime privileged the landlord's strong property rights and compounded the marginalisation of tenants in order to emphasise the exchange value of housing over its use value as a home.Footnote 113 Thus, they argued, it was a vital part of the process of state-promoted housing commodification that has been central to neoliberal capitalism in the UK since the 1980s.Footnote 114 Consequently, they contended that contesting and overturning this regime was a vital step towards addressing one of the root causes of the housing crisis.

(b) Technocratic reform but substantive continuity?

The Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016 significantly extended legal qualifications of landlord's property rights and it represents an instance of significant legal difference between Scotland and England. The emergence of legal difference has been attributed to constitutional change in the form of devolution and/or the housing politics of the SNP.Footnote 115 While both factors are important, they do not offer a convincing explanation for this development. This becomes apparent through a granular analysis of the law reform process, which reveals the important role played by Living Rent in politicising that process and contesting the acceptable parameters of reform.

Legal difference cannot be explained as an inevitable result of political devolution given that this major reform of the tenancy regime did not materialise until nearly two decades after the 1998 devolution settlement. Nor can the emergence of legal difference be simply attributed to the housing politics of the SNP. Although the SNP has struck a more pro-regulation stance than the other main parties of government across the UK, reforming the private tenancy regime was not an immediate priority.Footnote 116 The initial perception of the first SNP government (2007–2011) was that the tenancy regime it inherited was ‘operating satisfactorily’Footnote 117 and its primary concern was maintaining the flexibility of the sector and increasing the supply of private rented housing by creating conditions favourable to private institutional investors.Footnote 118

During the second SNP government (2011–2016) tenancy reform rose up the political agenda after the Scottish Private Sector Strategy Group identified tenants’ need for greater stability.Footnote 119 The government responded by commissioning a review of the tenancy regime, but in doing so, it made clear that regulatory changes should not ‘constrain growth’ by compromising the attractiveness of the sector to institutional investors and lenders.Footnote 120 Consequently, the Review Group developed a technocratic case for reform that was directed at ‘clarifying, simplifying, modernising and standardising the private tenancy’ but which steered clear of proposing dramatic changes to the balance of rights and obligations under the existing regime.Footnote 121

Unsurprisingly, the proposed tenancy regime promised various technical changes but little substantive change in many areas.Footnote 122 There would be an initial six-month statutory termFootnote 123 and there was no indication of any change to the market rents system.Footnote 124 The most notable changes were the proposals to end no-fault evictionsFootnote 125 and introduce notice periods that varied according to the duration of the tenancy.Footnote 126 While ending no-fault evictions was presented as being necessary to improve stability for tenants, policymakers were careful to offset this change by proposing ‘a modernised and simplified right of possession’.Footnote 127 This involved a major expansion in the role of mandatory grounds of possession such that under the new tenancy regime all of the grounds of possession would be mandatory (breach, arrears, sale, etc).Footnote 128

If implemented in this form, the tenancy regime would have eliminated from judicial consideration in all eviction cases the wider context of the dispute and the personal circumstances of the parties. Instead, it would justify the more or less automatic strong property rights-based outcome of eviction cases. Thus, it would have gone further than even the Housing Act 1988 in entrenching the strong property rights of landlords and reinforcing the property paradigm.Footnote 129 The Scottish government argued that such changes were necessary to safeguard the ‘return on investment and income from rent’ of landlords and prospective institutional investors and not jeopardise their access to buy-to-let financing.Footnote 130

(c) Contesting the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016

Reform took a decisive turn when the Scottish government launched a public consultation in 2014 on the tenancy reform proposals. The consultation generated over two and a half thousand responses and signalled a stinging rebuke of the proposed tenancy regime.Footnote 131 The majority of respondents made clear that the proposals did not go far enough in protecting tenants. However, it was the nearly two thousand responses organised by Living Rent which tipped the scales on most issues.Footnote 132 Most notably, the campaign responses organised by Living Rent were at odds with the majority of other responses which agreed that all grounds for possession should be mandatoryFootnote 133 and that the Scottish government should not take any action with regard to rent levels.Footnote 134 By contrast, Living Rent rejected the exclusive use of mandatory grounds for possession as a ‘serious weakening of the rights of tenants’Footnote 135 and instead advocated that tenancies should be indefiniteFootnote 136 and for the introduction of rent controls.Footnote 137

The Scottish government responded by amending the reform proposal and launching a second consultation in 2015. While re-committing to abolishing no-fault evictions, the revised proposals broke with the exclusive use of mandatory grounds for possession and instead redesignated a number of grounds as discretionary – although sale and rent arrears were to remain primarily mandatory grounds.Footnote 138 One of the other notable changes was in relation to rent regulation. While careful to rule out ‘any further general regulation of rents’, the Scottish government indicated it was considering targeted rent regulations ‘to protect tenants from excessive increases in hot-spot areas’.Footnote 139

The second consultation generated three times as many responses, amid competing campaigns organised by Living Rent and the Scottish Association of Landlords (SAL).Footnote 140 These campaigns were diametrically opposed on the use of mandatory grounds of possession and rent control. In contrast to the SAL, Living Rent advocated for ending no-fault evictions and rejected the use of mandatory grounds for possession.Footnote 141 Instead, Living Rent made clear that all grounds should be discretionary to ensure that ‘tenants should have the right to contest all evictions’.Footnote 142 On rent control, the SAL campaigns made clear its opposition to any rent control, outlining that ‘the sector should remain market-led’.Footnote 143 By contrast, Living Rent advocated for a system of rent control under which local authorities would ‘be able to implement special local measures when housing costs are more than a third of tenants’ incomes’.Footnote 144

The proposals were amended once again, and the revised proposal was implemented into law by the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016. In addition to a raft of technical changes, the Act abolished no-fault evictions, introduced indefinite tenancies and variable notice periods. Furthermore, it introduced targeted rent regulations designed to limit rent increases in ‘hot spot’ areas.Footnote 145 However it was not all one-way traffic. The government ruled out ‘any further general regulation of rents’Footnote 146 and the rent arrears ground of eviction remained a primarily mandatory ground,Footnote 147 while the category of mandatory grounds was expanded to include situations where the landlord wished to sell the dwelling.Footnote 148

The scale of Living Rent's success in utilising the consultation mechanism, in combination with lobbying and direct action, to politicise tenancy reform is striking. The campaign responses organised by Living Rent stand out because they were at odds with the majority of non-campaign responses, which tended to endorse the Scottish government's proposals to expand the role of mandatory grounds for possession and not take any general action to control rents. Crucially, Living Rent's campaign posed a direct challenge to the narrative that tenancy reform was largely a technocratic project that could realise apparently politically neutral objectives of modernisation and simplification without requiring dramatic changes to the existing balance of rights and obligations. Instead, Living Rent emphasised the imbalance of power between landlord and tenant, as entrenched by the Housing Act 1988, as the central issue that must be addressed.Footnote 149

Living Rent's campaigns to politicise and contest tenancy reform did not end once the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016 was enacted. The Act has been subject to numerous amendments and at each stage Living Rent have organised campaigns to push for expanding the qualifications of landlord's property rights.Footnote 150 Most notably, the Act was amended in 2020 to make all grounds for eviction discretionary.Footnote 151 Although this was a ‘time limited’ change in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, it has been repeatedly extended and now forms ‘the baseline legal position’.Footnote 152 Furthermore, the Scottish government introduced an eviction moratorium and rent freeze in response to the cost of living crisis in 2022.Footnote 153 Although both measures are time limited, the Scottish government committed in 2022 to introducing a general system of rent controls on a permanent basis.Footnote 154

In aggregate, these measures represent significant qualifications of the landlord's property rights, and so tend to undermine the strength of the property paradigm. In this respect, they distinguish the tenancy regime under the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016 from other private tenancy regimes that have been introduced or proposed in England and in Wales. While wider contextual factors, including the Covid-19 pandemic and the cost-of-living crisis, have shaped these developments, it is equally clear that legal difference cannot be fully understood without taking account of how Living Rent organised tenants to contest and, in some respects, displace the logic of the property paradigm. In doing so, Living Rent provide a model for other tenant unions and campaign groups including Acorn, Greater Manchester Tenants Union, London Renters Union, Generation Rent and others in campaigns over renting reform in England and Wales.

Conclusion

This paper has critically applied the theoretical framework developed by AJ van der Walt in Property in the Margins to analyse the English and Scottish property systems in times of ‘radical’ constitutional change from the perspective of those with ‘lesser’ rights. Although the Housing Act 1988 formally qualified the landlord's right to possession, its substantive effect was to rework those qualifications such that they would facilitate, rather than protect against, evictions. The net effect was a dramatic entrenchment of the property paradigm as part of a broader ideological project to commodify rented housing. In doing so, it exacerbated a range of inequalities that have become increasingly apparent with the revival of private renting over the past two decades. Yet this analysis ‘from below’ also reveals how, by entrenching the property paradigm in this way, this reform helped to create conditions of precarity for tenants and those conditions proved fertile ground for Living Rent to organise tenants and undertake popular campaigns to contest that paradigm.

This analysis also offers insights into how ‘radical’ constitutional change, in the form of devolution, interacted with property systems in the UK and how different policy responses to the crisis in the ‘revived’ private rented sector have emerged since 1998. Clearly devolution facilitated the development of significant legal difference in the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016, which has expanded tenant protections against eviction in a way that is at odds with how reforms in England and Wales have tended to preserve core features of the AST regime. However, this should not be taken to indicate the weakness of the property paradigm in Scottish law. Rather, the strength of that paradigm is apparent in the initial tenancy reform proposal which would have reinforced the landlord's strong property rights by making all grounds of possession mandatory. To understand why this did not come to pass, it is necessary to break with overly narrow approaches that explain reform as the inevitable result of devolution or as resulting from a top-down elite-driven process.

When the reform process is analysed ‘from below’, a more nuanced picture emerges. It is true that law reform in Scotland was made possible by constitutional change and that it has been shaped by the housing politics of the SNP as well as wider developments including the Covid-19 pandemic and the cost-of-living crisis. It is not possible to fully understand this development of significant legal difference without taking account of the reform process from which it emerged, and the important role which Living Rent played in politicising that process. Living Rent effectively used the consultation mechanism, as part of a broader campaign, to organise tenants, reject the logic of the property paradigm, and push for expanding qualifications of the landlord's property rights.

This study also provides insights into how positions of marginality and centrality are constructed and contested within property systems. Recognising that ‘property regimes reflect the characteristics of their accompanying economic, social and political system’, van der Walt identified how within liberal Western systems, ‘private property naturally holds a central place in society through its importance in the free market economy’.Footnote 155 In much the same way, the status of having lesser forms of property or not having property at all is relegated to the margins of social normality. The same centrality logic was replicated by the Housing Act 1988, which is underpinned by the notion that renting is transitory and that the ‘natural’ or normal tenure of choice is ownership. To be a renter in a ‘property-owning democracy’ is to be on the margins of the property system and of society. However, this paper has demonstrated that it is not necessary to ‘imagine’ the perspective of a tenant on the margins of such a system. Rather, a more direct way of developing this perspective involves taking seriously the actual practices of tenant unions, such as Living Rent, engaged in concrete struggles to contest the property paradigm. This provides a method that builds on van der Walt's work, and which gives weight to the collective voice and agency of marginalised and exploited tenants without reducing them to ‘the status of weakness and dependence’.Footnote 156

Finally, this paper demonstrates that having ‘lesser rights’ does not necessarily equal weakness, and that positions of marginality and centrality within property systems are not static but are often dynamic, contingent, and inherently open to contestation. In Scotland, Living Rent effectively organised tenants to challenge the conventional property structures that contributed to their marginality and exploitation. Much of Living Rent's success in contesting the property paradigm can be attributed to their recognition of the limits of narrow legalistic aims and methods. Instead, Living Rent present their campaign for legal reforms to expand tenant rights as but one part of a wider political struggle to challenge the commodification of housing. In this way, like so many social movements before them, Living Rent's campaigns are important because they make it ‘possible or easier to imagine or accept similar changes again’ elsewhere in the UK, and indeed further afield.Footnote 157

Footnotes

This paper has been updated. A Correction Notice has been issued detailing the change.

References

1 van der Walt, AJ Property in the Margins (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2009)Google Scholar.

2 Ibid, p 27.

3 Robson, P and Combe, M Residential Tenancies: Private and Social Renting in Scotland (Edinburgh: W Green, 4th edn, 2019)Google Scholar; M Combe ‘Shifting grounds for private renters in Scotland: eviction after the Coronavirus (Recovery and Reform) (Scotland) Act 2022 and during the Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Act 2022’ (2022) 4 Juridical Review 222; P Robson and M Combe ‘The first year of the first-tier: private residential tenancy eviction cases at the housing and property chamber’ (2019) 4 Juridical Review 325.

4 Bogdanor, V Devolution in the United Kingdom (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998) p 1Google Scholar.

5 Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities A Fairer Private Rented Sector CP 693, June 2022, https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1083381/A_fairer_private_rented_sector_print.pdf; Scottish Government A Stronger & More Resilient Scotland: The Programme for Government 2022–23 (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2022) p 25.

6 Marsh, A and Gibb, K The Private Rented Sector in the UK (Glasgow: UK Collaborative Centre for Housing Evidence, 2019) pp 5–7Google Scholar.

7 Carr, H et alIntroducing precarisation: contemporary understandings of law and the insecure home’ in Carr, H et al (eds) Law and the Precarious Home (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2020) pp 10–11Google Scholar; Rugg, J and Rhodes, D The Evolving Private Rented Sector: Its Contribution and Potential (York: Centre for Housing Policy, 2019) p 19Google Scholar; Marsh and Gibb, above n 6, p 6.

8 Hereafter, for simplicity, the term ‘Housing Act 1988’ is used and footnotes are used to elaborate differences. That Act is regarded as central to the process of housing financialisaton. See Madden, D and Marcuse, P In Defense of Housing: The Politics of Crisis (London: Verso, 2016) pp 8–11Google Scholar, 18.

9 De Shutter, O and Rajagopal, BProperty rights from below: an introduction to the debate’ in De Shutter, O and Rajagopal, B (eds) Property Rights from Below: Commodification of Land and the Counter-Movement (London: Routledge, 2020) p 1Google Scholar.

10 Rajagopal, B International Law from Below: Development, Social Movements and Third World Resistance (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003) p 2CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

11 De Shutter and Rajagopal, above n 9, p 1.

12 Ibid, pp 1–2.

13 Van der Walt, above n 1, pp 231–233.

14 Ibid, pp 231–232; JW Singer Entitlement: The Paradoxes of Property (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2000) pp 3, 6.

15 EM Peñalver and SK Katyal Property Outlaws: How Squatters, Pirates and Protesters Improve the Law of Ownership (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2010) p 10.

16 Van der Walt, above n 1, p 237.

17 Ibid, pp 231–232.

18 De Shutter and Rajagopal, above n 9, p 203.

19 Ibid, p 9.

20 Peñalver and Katyal, above n 15, p viii; L Fox-O'Mahony and ML Roark Squatting and the State: Resilient Property in an Age of Crisis (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022) p 6.

21 Van der Walt, above n 1, p 23.

22 L Fox-O'Mahony ‘Property outsiders and the hidden politics of doctrinalism’ (2014) 67 Current Legal Problems 409.

23 Peñalver and Katyal, above n 15, p viii; Fox-O'Mahony and Roark, above n 20, p 299.

24 M Jordan ‘Contesting housing inequality: housing rights and social movements’ (2023) Modern Law Review 1; A Fierro ‘Revolutionary politics of social rights? An ethnographic account of the homeless workers’ movement in São Paulo’ (2019) 47 Millennium Journal of International Studies 398.

25 Van der Walt, above n 1, p vii.

26 Ibid, p 24.

27 Ibid, p 43.

28 There are other theoretical frameworks that can be adapted to analyse property systems ‘from below’. See Fox-O'Mahony and Roark, above n 20; B Bhandar Colonial Lives of Property: Law, Land and Racial Regimes of Ownership (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2018); Peñalver and Katyal, above n 15; N Blomley Unsettling the City: Urban Land and the Politics of Property (New York: Routledge, 2004).

29 Van der Walt, above n 1, p viii.

30 Ibid, p 27.

31 Ibid, pp 27–28.

32 Ibid, pp 28, 37, 40.

33 Ibid, p 31.

34 Ibid, p 33.

35 Ibid, pp 20, 231.

36 Ibid, p 232.

37 Ibid, pp 238–245.

38 Ibid, p 77.

39 Ibid, p 56.

40 Ibid, pp 82, 130.

41 Ibid, pp 80–81.

42 Ibid, pp 130–131.

43 Ibid, pp 59–62.

44 See N Gray (ed) Rent and its Discontents: A Century of Housing Struggles (Transforming Capitalism) (London: Rowman & Littlefield, 2018).

45 Fox-O'Mahony and Roark, above n 20, p 299.

46 Van der Walt, above n 1, p 242.

47 See Gray, above n 44.

48 V Lima ‘Urban austerity and activism: direct action against neoliberal housing policies’ (2021) 36 Housing Studies 258.

49 Fierro, above n 24.

50 P O'Connell ‘Human rights: contesting the displacement thesis’ (2018) 69 Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly 19 at 27–29.

51 N Stammers Human Rights and Social Movements (London: Pluto Press, 2009) pp 164–169.

52 S Wilson Human Rights and the Transformation of Property (Cape Town: Juta Press, 2021) pp 79–81.

53 Jordan, above n 24, at 24–27.

54 The Act did not apply to Northern Ireland and so this study does not consider developments there. For an overview of the development of housing law in Northern Ireland, see T Hadden and D Trimble Northern Ireland Housing Law: The Public and Private Rented Sectors (Belfast: SLS Legal Publications, 1982) pp 11–15, 121–122.

55 See R Rawlings ‘The Welsh way/Y ffordd gymreig’ in J Jowell and C O'Cinneide (eds) The Changing Constitution (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 9th edn, 2019) pp 307–309.

56 L Fox-O'Mahony and R Walsh ‘Land law, property ideologies and the British-Irish relationship’ (2018) 47(1) Common Law World Review 7; C Kolbert and A Mackay History of Scots and English Land Law (Edinburgh: Geographical Publications Ltd, 1978).

57 See E Walsh ‘Security of tenure in the private rented sector in England: balancing the competing property rights of landlords and tenants’ in B McFarlane and S Agnew (eds) Modern Studies in Property Law, Volume 10 (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2019); Fox-O'Mahony and Walsh, above n 56; Kolbert and Mackay, above n 56.

58 A Steven and G Gretton Property, Trusts and Succession (London: Bloomsbury, 4th edn, 2021) pp 25–27.

59 The only ‘absolute’ owner of all the land is the Crown. See K Gray ‘Property in thin air’ (1991) 50(2) The Cambridge Law Journal 252 at 252–253.

60 B McFarlane et al Land Law: Text, Cases and Materials (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 5th edn, 2021) p 160.

61 Street v Mountford [1985] UKHL 4.

62 P Robson Housing Law in Scotland (Dundee: Dundee University Press, 2011) pp 1–14. This was not the case in Northern Ireland. See Hadden and Trimble, above n 54.

63 cf Increase of Rent and Mortgage Interest (War Restrictions) Act 1915, s 1(3) and Rent Act 1977, s 98 and sch 15; Rent Act (Scotland) 1984, s 11 and sch 2.

64 W Wilson ‘A short history of rent control’ House of Commons Library, Briefing Paper Number 6747, 30 March 2017 pp 5–10.

65 See Madden and Marcuse, above n 8.

66 House of Commons, Department of Environment Housing: The Government's Proposals White Paper Cm 214 September 1987, p 2; P Kemp Private Renting in Transition (Coventry: Chartered Institute of Housing, 2004) pp 55–57.

67 White Paper, above n 66, p 24; J Hohmann ‘Resisting dehumanising housing policy: the case for a right to housing in England’ (2017) 4(1) Queen Mary Human Rights Review 1 at 11–15.

68 Kemp, above n 66, pp 55–57.

69 The requirement to serve additional notice to create an AST was removed in England in 1996 when the AST was made the default tenancy: Housing Act 1996, s 96. There was no similar change in Scotland. See Robson, above n 62, pp 214–216.

70 Housing Act 1988, ss 5–8, 17 and sch 2; Housing (Scotland) Act 1988, ss 16–19, 31 and sch 5.

71 Housing Act 1988, sch 2, Part I, ground 8; Housing (Scotland) Act 1988, sch 5, Part 1, ground 8. See D Cowan Housing Law and Policy (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011) p 281; Robson, above n 62, pp 203–204.

72 Housing Act 1988, s 21; Housing (Scotland) Act 1988, s 33.

73 For England, see Nearly Legal ‘Section 21 flowchart’ (1 October 2021), available at https://nearlylegal.co.uk/section-21-flowchart/.

74 In England these are set out in CPR 55, Part II.

75 P Kemp ‘Private renting after the global financial crisis’ (2015) 30(4) Housing Studies 601 at 606–612.

76 Marsh and Gibb, above n 6, pp 5–7.

77 Kemp, above n 75.

78 Carr et al, above n 7, pp 10–11; Rugg and Rhodes, above n 7, p 19; Marsh and Gibb, above n 6, p 6.

79 J Rugg and D Rhodes The Private Rented Sector: Its Contribution and Potential (York: Centre for Housing Policy, 2008) pp xvii, xxi.

80 D Torrance ‘Introduction to devolution in the United Kingdom’ House of Commons Library, Briefing Paper No 8599, 25 January 2022, p 5.

81 J Mitchell Devolution in the UK (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2009) pp 6–15.

82 A McHarg ‘Devolution: a view from Scotland’ (Constitutional Law Matters, 2022), available at https://constitutionallawmatters.org/2022/05/23/devolution-a-view-from-scotland/.

83 Bogdanor, above n 4, p 1.

84 Ibid.

85 M Elliott ‘Parliamentary sovereignty in a changing constitutional landscape’ in Jowell and O'Cinneide, above n 55, pp 32–33.

86 See R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union [2017] UKSC 5 at [136]–[151]. Also see A McHarg ‘Constitutional change and territorial consent: the Miller case and the Sewel Convention’ in M Elliott et al (eds) The UK Constitution After Miller: Brexit and Beyond (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2018) pp 159–167.

87 R Davies ‘Return of the Welsh nation’ (Times Higher Education Supplement, 12 September 1997).

88 B Dickson ‘Devolution in Northern Ireland’ in Jowell and O'Cinneide, above n 55, pp 247–252; A McHarg ‘Devolution in Scotland’ in Jowell and O'Cinneide, above n 55, pp 277–283; Rawlings, above n 55, pp 301–309.

89 M Keep ‘The Barnett formula and fiscal devolution’ House of Commons Library, Briefing Paper No 7386, 11 July 2022; Mitchell, above n 81, pp 1–16.

90 B Lund Housing Politics in the United Kingdom (Bristol: Policy Press, 2016) p 233.

91 Welsh Government Homes for Wales, A White Paper for Better Lives and Communities (Cardiff: Welsh Government, 2012) pp 47–48; National Assembly for Wales Communities and Culture Committee Making the Most of the Private Rented Sector in Wales (Cardiff: National Assembly for Wales, 2011) pp 8–10.

92 Written Statement – Renting Homes (Wales) Bill 2015 9 February 2015, available at https://www.gov.wales/written-statement-renting-homes-wales-bill-2015.

93 Law Commission Renting Homes in Wales, Report No 337, 2013, para 2.3.

94 Ibid, paras 2.1–2.56.

95 Renting Homes (Wales) Act 2016, s 215. The only situation in which the court may refuse an order is if possession is sought as part of a retaliatory eviction to avoid an obligation, for instance, to repair the property. See Welsh Government Increasing the Minimum Notice Period for a ‘No Fault Eviction (Cardiff: Welsh Government, 2019) pp 4–5.

96 Renting Homes (Wales) Act 2016, s 216.

97 While rent reviews are limited to once per year, as with the AST, there is no equivalent prohibition on the charging of excessive rents contained in s 22 of the Housing Act 1988.

98 Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government (MHCLG) Government Announces End to Unfair Evictions (MHCLG, 2019), available at https://www.gov.uk/government/news/government-announces-end-to-unfair-evictions.

99 R Lott-Lavigna and S Gelder ‘“No-fault” evictions ban delayed indefinitely after landlord lobbying’ (OpenDemocracy, 2023), available at https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/renters-reform-bill-section-21-evictions-michael-gove-no-fault/.

100 Department of Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC) A Fairer Private Rented Sector (DLHUC, 2022) ch 3.

101 Robson and Combe, above n 3; Combe, above n 3; Robson and Combe, ‘The first year of the First-tier’, above n 3.

102 Walsh, above n 57, p 212; T Moore ‘The convergence, divergence and changing geography of regulation in the UK's private rented sector’ (2017) 17(3) International Journal Of Housing Studies 444 at 445; K Gibb ‘Housing policy in Scotland since devolution: divergence, crisis, integration and opportunity’ (2015) 23(1) Journal of Poverty and Social Justice 19 at 23–25; K McKee et al ‘Housing policy in the UK: the importance of spatial nuance’ (2017) 32(1) Housing Studies 60 at 70–72.

103 A Murie ‘The housing legacy of Thatcherism’ in S Farrall and C Hay (eds) The Legacy of Thatcherism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014) p 147.

104 Scottish Government Private Sector Rent Statistics: 2010–2021 (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2021) pp 3–4; Scottish Government Housing Statistics 2019: Key Trends and Summary (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2019) pp 3–4; Scottish Government Scottish House Condition Survey 2019: Key Findings (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2020) pp 9–10; Joseph Rowntree Foundation Poverty in Scotland 2020 (York: Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2020) pp 17–24.

105 E Saunders et al ‘Rebuilding a shattered housing movement: Living Rent and contemporary private tenant struggles in Scotland’ in N Gray (ed) Rent and its Discontents (London: Rowman & Littlefield, 2018) pp 101–102; N Gray et al ‘Fighting for a living rent’ (Scottish Left Review, 2019), available at https://scottishleftreview.scot/fighting-for-a-living-rent/.

106 Saunders et al, ibid, p 104.

107 Ibid; Living Rent Tenants’ Manifesto 2020/21 (Edinburgh: Living Rent, 2020) pp 1–4.

108 Jordan, above n 24, at 24–27; R Serpa and E Saunders ‘Towards an effective right to housing in Scotland’ in G Gall (ed) A New Scotland: Building an Equal, Fair and Sustainable Society (London: Pluto Press, 2022).

109 Gray et al, above n 105.

110 Saunders et al, above n 105, pp 104–106.

111 Ibid.

112 Ibid, p 114.

113 Ibid, p 104.

114 Living Rent, above n 107, pp 1–4.

115 Walsh, above n 57, p 212; Moore, above n 102, at 445; Gibb, above n 102, at 23–25; McKee et al, above n 102, at 70–72.

116 Scottish Government Firm Foundations (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2007) pp 28, 30.

117 Scottish Government Scottish Private Rented Sector Strategy Group Consultation Recommendations Report (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2009) p 20.

118 Scottish Government A Strategy for the Private Rented Sector in Scotland (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2013) pp iv, 1; Scottish Government Homes Fit for the 21st Century (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2011) p 14; Scottish Government Firm Foundations, above n 116, pp 28, 30.

119 Scottish Government A Strategy for the Private Rented Sector in Scotland, ibid, p 24.

120 Ibid, p 25.

121 Scottish Government Report of the Review of the Private Rented Sector Tenancy Regime (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2014) pp 6, 7, 11–12.

122 The technical changes included introducing a new model tenancy agreement, simplifying notice requirements and tenancy ‘roll over’ arrangements. See Scottish Government Consultation on a New Tenancy for the Private Sector (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2014) p 12.

123 Ibid, at paras 37–41.

124 Ibid, at paras 65–70.

125 Ibid, at paras 25–30.

126 Ibid, at paras 42–44.

127 Scottish Government Review of the Private Rented Sector Tenancy Regime, above n 121, p 10.

128 Scottish Government Consultation, above n 122, at paras 45–52.

129 As Malcolm Combe explains, ‘this was a feature rather than a bug’ see Combe, above n 3, at 223.

130 Scottish Government Consultation, above n 122, at para 46.

131 Scottish Government Consultation on a New Tenancy for the Private Sector: Analysis of Consultation Responses (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2014) at para 4.

132 Ibid, at para 1.9. Campaigns organised by Living Rent accounted for three quarters of all responses.

133 See Scottish Government Analysis of Consultation Responses, above n 131, at para 3.5.

134 Ibid, at paras 4.14–4.19.

135 Ibid, at paras 3.5 and 3.12.

136 Ibid, at paras 16–17.

137 Ibid, at paras 4.14.

138 Scottish Government Second Consultation on a New Tenancy for the Private Sector (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2015) pp 14–23.

139 Ibid, p 13.

140 Scottish Government Second Consultation on a New Tenancy for the Private Sector: Analysis of Consultation Responses (Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 2015) p 3.

141 Ibid, pp 7–8.

142 Ibid, p 8.

143 Ibid, pp 73–74.

144 Ibid, p 74.

145 Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016, s 38.

146 Scottish Government Second Consultation Analysis of Consultation Responses, above n 140, p 71.

147 Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016, sch 3, ground 12.

148 Ibid, ground 1.

149 Saunders et al, above n 105, pp 110–114; Gray et al, above n 105.

150 G Maloney ‘“Politics is a question of power – not simply of ideas”. On Scotland’s proposal for rent controls’ (GM Housing Action, 27 August 2021), available at http://www.gmhousingaction.com/scotland-rent-controls/; Living Rent ‘Protecting tenants during the pandemic’ (Living Rent, 25 March 2020), available at https://www.livingrent.org/protecting_tenants_during_the_pandemic.

151 Coronavirus (Scotland) Act 2020, sch 1; Coronavirus (Recovery and Reform) (Scotland) Act 2022, part 4.

152 Combe, above n 3, at 229.

153 Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Act 2022, schs 1 and 2. See Combe, above n 3, at 226–229. See The Scottish Association of Landlords v The Lord Advocate [2023] CSOH 76.

154 Scottish Government A Stronger & More Resilient Scotland, above n 5.

155 Van der Walt, above n 1, pp 231–232.

156 Ibid, p 242.

157 Ibid, p 244.