This article considers John Orth's 'generalisations/reappraisals' in the law of property, offering an addition to that list concerning the way in which the historical development of the law of property provides a tool for the shaping of the physical world in which we live. Having reviewed Orth's approach, the article contains three parts. The first, entitled 'History Shapes Law', examines the historical development of the modern Anglo- American easement. The second, 'Law Shapes Landscape', explores how it is that property law shapes our landscapes. The third, 'Landscape Shapes Law', concludes by noting that our modern landscapes themselves create a new set of social, political and economic circumstances, the very sort of catalysts for shift...
In both his article Property as the Law of Things and his prior work, Professor Henry Smith has revi...
How should we think about property and property law both descriptively and normatively? This article...
In this Article, we demonstrate that every property question invariably involves three distinct dime...
Property is a concept that is seemingly simple to understand yet continually evolving in the face of...
The theme of this special volume is “Challenging Traditional Notions of Property in Land Use Plannin...
© 2011 Nicole Graham. All rights reserved. Lawscape: Property, Environment, Law considers the ways i...
Over the last five centuries, the commodification of land has fundamentally helped and shaped the ex...
Human activity has replaced nature as the principal force shaping our planet. As a result, we stand ...
Property rights are, I argue, the single largest legal limitation on our ability to respond effectiv...
Property scholars think of property law as consisting of a small number of highly technical forms cr...
A number of scholars have criticized the ways in which property law simplifies nature. Such reductiv...
This Article looks at aspects of a particular societal problem as it was approached at different his...
In 1973 John Henry Merryman noted that property law is a largely unexplored field of comparative stu...
The making private of hitherto public goods is a central tenet of neoliberalism. From land in Africa...
This article deals with property laws, based on two premises. Firstly, property law as means to a co...
In both his article Property as the Law of Things and his prior work, Professor Henry Smith has revi...
How should we think about property and property law both descriptively and normatively? This article...
In this Article, we demonstrate that every property question invariably involves three distinct dime...
Property is a concept that is seemingly simple to understand yet continually evolving in the face of...
The theme of this special volume is “Challenging Traditional Notions of Property in Land Use Plannin...
© 2011 Nicole Graham. All rights reserved. Lawscape: Property, Environment, Law considers the ways i...
Over the last five centuries, the commodification of land has fundamentally helped and shaped the ex...
Human activity has replaced nature as the principal force shaping our planet. As a result, we stand ...
Property rights are, I argue, the single largest legal limitation on our ability to respond effectiv...
Property scholars think of property law as consisting of a small number of highly technical forms cr...
A number of scholars have criticized the ways in which property law simplifies nature. Such reductiv...
This Article looks at aspects of a particular societal problem as it was approached at different his...
In 1973 John Henry Merryman noted that property law is a largely unexplored field of comparative stu...
The making private of hitherto public goods is a central tenet of neoliberalism. From land in Africa...
This article deals with property laws, based on two premises. Firstly, property law as means to a co...
In both his article Property as the Law of Things and his prior work, Professor Henry Smith has revi...
How should we think about property and property law both descriptively and normatively? This article...
In this Article, we demonstrate that every property question invariably involves three distinct dime...