Real property transactions in the network society : platform real estate, housing hactivism, and the re-scaling of public and private power

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dc.contributor.author Roark, Marc L.
dc.contributor.author Fox O'Mahony, Lorna
dc.date.accessioned 2024-03-06T07:51:31Z
dc.date.available 2024-03-06T07:51:31Z
dc.date.issued 2023-12
dc.description.abstract Technology is rapidly transforming the landscape of land ownership and housing transactions, creating new types of consumer risk and new regulatory challenges. As markets, legal systems, and housing consumers navigate the new opportunities and risks of “platform real estate” (or “PropTech”), the underlying land laws, policies, and practices that produce the material context and legal framework for real property transactions, and against which consumer risk and regulation must be understood, require “re-scaling.” In this article, we offer a theoretical framework for this re-scaling project, drawing on our earlier work to develop Resilient Property Theory (RPT) for analysing complex, large-scale property questions using methods that—in a departure from liberal property theories—pay attention to the public role of the state. Against a backdrop in which narratives of private property law defined real property transactions as “private realm” activities, while consumer law and policy provided the vehicle for state-backed regulation of specifically defined transactions based on a risk-based approach, this article brings the state back into view to reflect on new configurations of risk in consumer housing transactions. In the de-materialized realm of the “network society,” networks, platforms, and innovations are recalibrating housing transactions. In this data-driven world, land transactions are financialized, depersonalized, and increasingly remote from the materiality of land and the consumption of housing. As new capabilities in digital land transaction systems reach back into the underlying law of ownership, official (state), insider (global capital markets), and outsider (social movement activists) networks have evolved to leverage their relative positionality. This article uses techniques developed in RPT to examine the re-scaling of risk in real property and housing transactions through digital network technologies. We consider the implications of resilience needs in the network society in relation to the public sovereignty of the state, the private sovereignty of land ownership, and practices of resistance to public and private sovereignty through “housing hacktivism.” Finally, we argue that conceptions of consumer vulnerability and risk and embedded ideas about the relationships between private property law and consumer law and policy in real property transactions must evolve to take account of these effects. en_US
dc.description.department Private Law en_US
dc.description.librarian hj2024 en_US
dc.description.sdg SDG-17:Partnerships for the goals en_US
dc.description.uri https://link.springer.com/journal/10603 en_US
dc.identifier.citation Roark, M.L., Fox O’Mahony, L. Real Property Transactions in the Network Society: Platform Real Estate, Housing Hactivism, and the Re-scaling of Public and Private Power. Journal of Consumer Policy 46, 445–463 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10603-023-09548-5. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 0168-7034 (print)
dc.identifier.issn 1573-0700 (online)
dc.identifier.other 10.1007/s10603-023-09548-5
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/95091
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Springer en_US
dc.rights © The Author(s) 2023. Open Access. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. en_US
dc.subject Land registration en_US
dc.subject FinTech en_US
dc.subject Financialization en_US
dc.subject Network state en_US
dc.subject Housing en_US
dc.subject Platform real estate en_US
dc.subject SDG-17: Partnerships for the goals en_US
dc.title Real property transactions in the network society : platform real estate, housing hactivism, and the re-scaling of public and private power en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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