1972 Community Land Trust Book reprint
Dear Member,
"The story of land is older than the story of man. Land came first; no man
created it. Every society, large or small, must devise ways in which its
members will share this gift. This is allocation. Members of society must
also determine under what conditions the land will be passed on to the next
generation. This is continuity. And they must decide if, when, and how it
may be traded with others. This is exchange."
--From "The Community Land Trust: A Guide to a New Model for Land Tenure in
America."
In 1967 E. F. Schumacher Society founding President Robert Swann developed
the first community land trust in this country as a way to secure land for
African-American farmers in rural Georgia. Slater King, cousin of Martin
Luther King, partnered with Swann in this initiative. The experience in
Georgia was captured in the 1972 book "The Community Land Trust: A Guide to
a New Model of Land Tenure in America," published by the International
Independence Institute and authored by Swann with Shimon Gottschalk, Erick
S. Hansch, and Edward Webster. The book started a revolution in our
thinking about land ownership. Now over 200 community land trusts operate
across North America and the number is growing.
A community land trust is based on the belief that "in our society, if not
in much of the world, unsatisfactory institutional answers have been evolved
to the questions of allocation, continuity, and exchange--a community land
trust is only one idea among many which are needed to restructure our social
and economic system in order to produce a world order, not without conflict
but without war; not without sorrow but without hopelessness; not without
inequality but without inequity."
Thanks to the initiative of Edward Webster, one of the book's original
authors, we are pleased to announce that a reprint of the 1972 book is now
available through the E. F. Schumacher Society.
"The system of private ownership of land that led to high productivity and
personal independence one hundred years ago has become a major source of
economic and social inequity. Private ownership of land is increasingly
translated into corporate ownership, and, despite the increase in private
homeownership, ever more land is being held in relatively fewer hands.
Middle income families, as they attempt to purchase their homes, are forced
to pay inflated prices, and the poor, as always, are almost totally
excluded."
With the upward movement of land holding into the hands of a few wealthy
corporations and individuals the need for a new system of land distribution
becomes clear. The community land trust model, outlined in this book,
offers a form of land tenure giving ownership rights to the individual while
holding the land in trust. "The community land trust is not primarily
concerned with common ownership. Rather, its concern is for ownership for
the common good, which may or may not be combined with common ownership."
"The community land trust is a legal entity, a quasi-legal body, chartered
to hold land in stewardship for all mankind present and future while
protecting the legitimate use rights of the residents."
Lands held in trust are not subject to speculative price increase, therefore
can be offered to individuals more equitably. Land tenure is then the
result of the productive capacity of the land to provide food, supply a site
for home construction, or a place for reasonable development. People, when
provided land, have the capacity to create value. "Property is created by
man through his labor. [What Ralph Borsodi calls] Trusterty includes land,
the atmosphere, rivers, lakes, seas, natural forests, and mineral resources
of the earth. Since these do not come into existence as a result of human
labor, they cannot be morally owned; they can only be held in trust." Each
person should have equal access to this trusterty so that he or she may
create value by his or her labor.
"Whereas residents will own their own homes and their improvements which
they make on their individual plots, ownership of the land will rest with
the trust…The effects of the land trust will be to decommoditize the land,
and thus safeguard the newly independent farmer's right to his property,
regardless of the fluctuations of the harvest or the market. The perpetual
trust will guarantee that land cannot be repossessed by creditors in times
of hardship. It will eliminate the possibility of land speculation, and
absentee landlordism will be permanently avoided."
As we see land prices rising, small farmers being dislocated, and the poor
being left homeless the need for the community land trust model, as
originally described by Bob Swann, Shimon Gottschalk, Erick Hansch and
Edward Webster, becomes evermore important. Newly reprinted by DRA of
Vermont, with the assistance of Edward Webster, "The Community Land Trust: A
Guide to a New Model for Land Tenure in America" is a critical tool for
understanding the history and roots of the community land trust model,
including, as it does, theory, practice and legal aspects of "restor[ing]
the land trust concept."
The newly reprinted version is available from the E. F. Schumacher Society
for twenty dollars. Pay with BerkShares (http://www.berkshares.org), cash,
check or credit card.
For a full list of books and pamphlets offered by the E. F. Schumacher
Society with descriptions, a printable order form, and secure online payment
form, go to:
http://www.smallisbeautiful.org/publications.html
A detailed directory of community land trusts throughout North America can
be found at:
http://www.smallisbeautiful.org/clts.html
Our thanks to the members of the E. F. Schumacher Society whose support
enables us to maintain this important resource base for building sustainable
local economies.
Sincerely,
Susan Witt, Christopher Lindstrom, Peter Tiso,
Michael Gordon, and Kristen Fix
E. F. Schumacher Society Staff
140 Jug End Road
Great Barrington, MA 01230
(413) 528-1737
efssociety@smallisbeautiful.org
http://www.smallisbeautiful.org
Board of Directors: Jessica Brackman, Starling Childs, Merrian Fuller,
Hildegarde Hannum, Eric Harris-Braun, Constance Packard, Joseph Stanislaw,
Ganson Taggart, Nancy Jack Todd, and Charles Turner.
Board of Founders: Ian Baldwin, David Ehrenfeld, Satish Kumar,
John McClaughry, and Kirkpatrick Sale.
Advisory Board: Tanya Berry, Thomas Berry, Wendell Berry, Lisa Byers, Olivia
Dreier, Hazel Henderson, Wes Jackson, Amory Lovins, John McKnight, David
Orr, Michael Shuman, Cathrine Sneed, Lewis Solomon, John Todd, Greg Watson,
and Arthur Zajonc.
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