

Land Power: Who Has It, Who Doesn’t, and How That Determines the Fate of Societies w/ Michael Albertus
May 8, 2025
Michael Albertus, a political scientist at the University of Chicago and author of Land Power, discusses how land ownership dictates the power dynamics within societies. He reveals how land control fuels inequality, social exclusion, and environmental destruction, impacting both authoritarian regimes and democracies. Albertus also explores the effects of zoning laws, gentrification, and the fight for indigenous rights, while highlighting the importance of land reform in achieving social justice and combating climate change.
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Land Ownership as Power
- Land ownership confers economic, social, and political power to those who hold it.
- Owners dominate various power forms, while non-owners often become dominated.
Origins of Land Power
- Land became power with sedentary societies and surplus production from agriculture.
- Surplus allowed specialization, power aggregation, and territorial conflicts from 3000 BC onwards.
Land Power and Labor Control
- Land control often meant control over people working the land.
- Unequal landholding supported slavery and feudal systems tied labor to landowners.