The c18th - C20th inclosure acts forced certain castes of people from the land and some of them had to live on the roads or in hedges when outside of those annual periods when agricultural wage labour/accommodation was available - which led to other problems including a generally held suspicion of 'itinerants' on the part of landowners and townsfolk. Need leads sometimes to what is viewed as criminality. Further controlling laws grew from that. It was miserable in England. Worse in Scotland.
OT : Such disposession continued in the way the railways were built, the London Underground, just for example, was involved in patterns of land acquisition which were interesting, and of course the laws exercised by the UK state to build motorways still exist and are exercised. It is also an interesting fact that in the UK 55% of houseowners have mortgages, i.e. they don't hold their own ownership documents. Similar for farmers and rural landowners. Fail to pay the mortgage and you may well be out on your ear. It is all very precarious.
OT : Such disposession continued in the way the railways were built, the London Underground, just for example, was involved in patterns of land acquisition which were interesting, and of course the laws exercised by the UK state to build motorways still exist and are exercised. It is also an interesting fact that in the UK 55% of houseowners have mortgages, i.e. they don't hold their own ownership documents. Similar for farmers and rural landowners. Fail to pay the mortgage and you may well be out on your ear. It is all very precarious.
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