Lorna Fox O'Mahony is Professor of Law at Essex Law School and Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the University of Essex. Her research explores a wide range of property issues using cross-disciplinary methods. She is author or editor of several books, including Conceptualising Home: Theories, Laws and Policies (2006), which was awarded the Society of Legal Scholars' Birks Prize for Outstanding Legal Scholarship (2007). Marc Roark is the Louisiana Outside Counsel of Health and Ethics Endowed Professor of Law at the Southern University Law Center. His is also a Senior Fellow at the Native American Law and Policy Institute at Southern University. He has published widely on issues at the intersection of property, housing, homelessness and identity. He is a member of the EVICT research network and serves on the Advisory Panel for the UNESCO Housing Chair at the Universitat Rovira I Virgilli, Tarragona, Spain.
'This timely and important book compels us to rethink how law structures property relations between individuals, institutions, and the state. It is a must-read for anyone interested in reforming property law to be more responsive to our collective human need for resilience.' Martha Albertson Fineman, Robert W Woodruff Professor of Law, Emory University, Founding Director of the Vulnerability and the Human Condition Initiative 'With the unfurling of seemingly perpetual socio-economic, health, and ecological crises destabilizing long-held conceptions of law, property theory is overdue for a reckoning with the imbrication of the state's vulnerability and property's role in individual and institutional resilience. Fox O'Mahony and Roark's erudite and innovative guide to an emerging world offers a force and moral clarity that demand recognition.' Nestor M. Davidson, Albert A. Walsh Professor of Real Estate, Land Use and Property Law, Urban Law Center, Fordham Law School 'The authors have produced a monumental contribution to property theory. States should draw inspiration from this monograph as they respond to the polycentric demands of housing crises at multiple levels using an array of resources. Resilience thinking and adaptability will become the baseline in housing scholarship for years to come.' Gustav Muller, Associate Professor of Private Law, University of Pretoria