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British Wildlife is the leading natural history magazine in the UK, providing essential reading for both enthusiast and professional naturalists and wildlife conservationists. Published eight times a year, British Wildlife bridges the gap between popular writing and scientific literature through a combination of long-form articles, regular columns and reports, book reviews and letters.
Conservation Land Management (CLM) is a quarterly magazine that is widely regarded as essential reading for all who are involved in land management for nature conservation, across the British Isles. CLM includes long-form articles, events listings, publication reviews, new product information and updates, reports of conferences and letters.
Who owns England?
Behind this simple question lies this country's oldest and darkest secret. This is the history of how England's elite came to own our land – from aristocrats and the church to businessmen and corporations – and an inspiring manifesto for how we can take control back. Who Owns England? has been a long time coming. Since 1086, in fact. For centuries, England's establishment have been able to cover up how they got their hands on millions of acres of common land, by building walls, burying surveys and more recently, sheltering behind offshore shell companies. But with the dawn of digital mapping and the Freedom of Information Act, they can no longer hide.
Trespassing through country estates and empty Mayfair mansions, writer and activist Guy Shrubsole has used these 21st Century tools to uncover a wealth of never-before-seen information about the people who own our land, in order to create the most comprehensive map of land ownership in England that has ever been made public.
From the Duke who owns the most expensive location on the Monopoly board to the MP who's the biggest landowner in his county, he unearths truths concealed since the Domesday Book about who is really in charge of this country at a time when Brexit is meant to be returning sovereignty to the people.
It's time to expose the truth about who owns England and finally take back our green and pleasant land.
Guy Shrubsole works as a campaigner for Friends of the Earth and has written for numerous publications including The New Statesman and Open Democracy.
"A formidable, brave and important book"
– Robert Macfarlane
"Potentially one of the most important books of the year"
– Chris Packham
"This is going to be a great book, crucial for anyone who seeks to understand this country"
– George Monbiot
"An irrefutable and long overdue call for the enfranchisement of the landless"
– Marion Shoard, author of This Land is Our Land
"The question posed by the title of this crucial book has, for nearly a thousand years, been one that as a nation we have mostly been too cowed or too polite to ask. There has, as a result, been some serious journalistic legwork in Shrubsole's endeavour. Shrubsole ends his fine inquiry into these issues with a 10-point prospectus as to how this millennium-long problem might be brought up to date, and how our land could be made to work productively and healthily for us all"
– Observer, Book of the Week
"Both detective story and historical investigation, Shrubsole's book is a passionately argued polemic which offers radical, innovative but also practical proposals for transforming how the people of England use and protect the land that they depend on – land which should be "a common treasury for all""
– Guardian
"Painstakingly researched [...] having come to the end of this illuminating and well-argued book it's hard not to feel that it's time for a revolution in the way we manage this green and pleasant land"
– Melissa Harrison, New Statesman
"There is an enormous amount to admire"
– Times Literary Supplement
"Shrubsole is an entertaining guide to the history of landownership"
– Literary Review