Sosillyology of Land

(Music fades slightly — Woody Guthrie still humming underneath)

if you ever want to understand land, [you]

don’t [need to] start with a textbook.

Start with someone who’s been pushed off it.

Woody Guthrie wrote I Ain’t Got No Home during the Dust Bowl —

a time when land wasn’t just dirt,

it was survival.

And when the land failed — or was taken —

people didn’t just lose property.

They lost place.

and dignity.

and belonging.

Woody Guthrie tells us something very important:

Land isn’t neutral.

(tiny pause)

Land remembers who controls it.

Now… I want to be clear right up front —

this isn’t a geography show,

it’s not a real estate show,

This is a sociology of land show.

Which means we’re asking uncomfortable questions like:

• Who gets land?

• Who loses land?

• Who decides what land is for?

• And why does land keep showing up

whenever people are arguing, marching, or singing?

(beat)

Funny thing is —

everybody agrees land is important

right up until we talk about who it belongs to.

That’s when things get… lively.

🧠 The Sociologists We’re Carrying Today

Let me introduce the minds we’re bringing into this conversation —

not as bosses,

or authorities,

but as people who help us notice things.

Karl Marx

was obsessed with land —

not because he loved farming,

but because land is one of the first things ever owned.

For Marx, land is power frozen in soil.

If you control land,

you control food, housing, work —

and eventually… people.

And once land becomes property,

it stops being shared

and starts being defended.

Sometimes with laws.

Sometimes with fences.

Sometimes with guns.

(gentle pause)

That’s not ideology.

That’s history.

Next, someone much closer to my own sociological heart:

Howard Becker

Becker didn’t start with big systems —

he started with everyday life.

He’d ask questions like:

Who gets labeled as a squatter?

Who gets called a pioneer?

Why does one person “homestead”

while another is “trespassing” —

on the same piece of land?

Becker reminds us that land isn’t just owned —

it’s defined.

And definitions, as it turns out,

are very powerful little things.

And now… we have to talk about something even older.

(music fades out fully)

🌱 Land Before Sociology

Long before Marx.

Long before Becker.

Long before universities and microphones and radio shows…

Indigenous peoples already had land systems.

Not ownership systems.

Relationship systems.

Land wasn’t a thing you owned —

it was something you belonged to.

Which brings us, very naturally,

to Land Back Movement.

When you hear “Land Back,”

don’t hear nostalgia.

Hear sociology.

It’s a challenge to the idea that land can be fully owned,

fully sold,

fully erased of memory.

It’s saying:

You can draw new maps —

but the old ones don’t disappear.

😏 A Little Comedy (Because We Need It)

Now… I know what some of you are thinking.

“Okay Scott,

but I didn’t steal any land.

I can barely afford my rent.”

Fair point.

Most of us are just trying to figure out

how we ended up paying property taxes

on land we can’t afford

to pass on to our kids.

(beat)

Which is why land arguments always feel so personal.

Land is where we stand —

literally and emotionally.

Mess with someone’s land

and suddenly everyone becomes

a philosopher, a lawyer,

and a historian.

Usually at the same time.

🔥 Setting Up the Second Song

And that brings us perfectly

from Woody Guthrie’s I Ain’t Got No Home

to Land Back.

From dispossession

to resistance.

From mourning

to movement.

From “I’ve got nowhere to stand”

to “This is where we stand.”

(voice softens)

That’s not a coincidence.

That’s sociology singing back.

🎧 Closing the Intro

So tonight, as we move through this unit,

we’re not looking for easy answers.

We’re looking for better questions.

Because land is never just land.

It’s history under our feet.

It’s power in disguise.

It’s memory that doesn’t forget —

even when we do.

(slight smile in the voice)

Alright…

let’s turn the volume back up

and let the land speak for itself.

(cue “Land Back”)

If you want, next we can:

• Add a 60-second comedy clip suggestion (CBC, stand-up, or old-school radio)

• Build the 12-section structure for the full Land unit

• Or tailor this intro tighter for exact timing down to seconds

Just say the word — Noah’s got her boots on. 🌍 The Sociology of Land: An Overview

1. Land as Structure

Sociologically, land is never just dirt or terrain — it’s structure.

It’s the foundation of the economic order (who owns what), the political order (who decides what happens there), and the cultural order (who belongs).

Think Marx here: the means of production literally start with land. Land is where labor meets capital.

Durkheim might look at land as sacred — the soil of collective identity.

Weber would ask how land ownership and religion shaped social stratification (as in Protestant settlers and colonial expansion).

2. Land and Power

Land relations are power relations.

• Feudalism: Nobles owned, peasants worked — classic stratification.

• Colonialism: Europeans seized Indigenous lands, imposing new property systems and erasing communal traditions.

• Capitalism: Land became a commodity — something to buy, sell, speculate on.

Peter Blau might see land exchange as a form of social exchange that structures inequality.

3. Land and Identity

Land is home, memory, and ancestry.

• Indigenous sociologies often begin here — land as relation, not resource.

• For migrants, land becomes a site of nostalgia and new belonging.

• For environmentalists like Rachel Carson or Vandana Shiva, land is alive — and modern industrial life has severed that relationship.

4. Land and Conflict

Wars, treaties, borders, and pipelines — all expressions of social tension over land.

Think of Garrett Hardin’s “Tragedy of the Commons” and Elinor Ostrom’s response that communities can govern shared resources effectively.

Or Howard Becker’s insight: the social rules defining “use” or “ownership” are constructed. Deviance in land use (like squatting, blockades, or illegal extraction) reveals the moral boundaries of a society.

5. Land and the Sacred

Émile Durkheim saw sacred spaces as symbols of collective unity.

In many traditions, land is literally sacred — the ancestors live in it.

In settler societies, this tension between sacred land and private property defines much of our national character.

6. Land in Modern Transitions

• Urbanization: Land transforms into real estate and zoning maps.

• Gentrification: Land reallocation through class turnover.

• Climate change: Rising seas, drought, and displacement reframe land as vulnerability.

• Digital economy: Even data centers depend on cool, stable land — often near Indigenous territories or fragile ecosystems.

🔍 Sociologists & Thinkers to Anchor It

• Karl Marx: Land as base of production and class conflict.

• Max Weber: Land, bureaucracy, and power legitimation.

• Pierre Bourdieu: Land and symbolic capital — the habitus of “rural” vs. “urban.”

• Patricia Marchak: Forestry, land use, and the political economy of resource industries.

• Vandana Shiva: Ecofeminism and resistance to land privatization.

• Howard Becker: Labeling and social rules — what counts as “trespassing,” “stewardship,” or “sacred space.”

• Indigenous scholars: Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Glen Coulthard (Red Skin, White Masks), and Taiaiake Alfred explore how land defines decolonization and resistance.

🎙️ UcOtt Raddio Daddio Angle

You could approach the “Sociology of Land” as a living conversation between:

• The soil and the soul — the economic and the sacred.

• Ownership and belonging — who decides, who remembers, who returns.

• Extraction and regeneration — what we take and what we give back.

You might open with a local story — maybe Dawson’s own relationship with Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in land and the gold rush — and pair it with songs like:

This Land Is Your Land – Woody Guthrie (with the “private property” verse restored!)

Big Yellow Taxi – Joni Mitchell

Land of Gold – Anoushka Shankar

Heart of Gold – Neil Young

Territory – The Blaze

Our Home and Native Land – reinterpretation by Indigenous artists

Would you like me to sketch out a radio segment plan for “The Sociology of Land” — something like a 2-hour UcOtt Raddio Daddio outline with music, sociologists, and possible stories woven in?

The story of land   “Who owns the world.” (John harddrive)

1900 home ownership 1% kings religions. Freeholders in England are tenants

Constitutional monarchy rule and own states and monarchs. Largest feudal state china states 3rd

Saudi arabia RULE AND ownership

Irish republic land ownership high

India big problem

China doing well

Spain 

Short exerpt  on mining which we will address as a separate unit

Agriculture

Farming

Fishing

Indigenous

Water

Ownership

Borders walls

Gender

Tech

Religion

Race

Age

Politics

Peace