This article uses a social welfare approach to determine if and when the institution of constitutional judicial review of property regulation and expropriation is efficient. A model is proposed in which property rights protection is a component of social costs. Constitutional judicial review is assumed to either add to or subtract on net from those costs, affecting social welfare generally. It will be shown that under realistic conditions, reflected in real instances, that constitutional judicial review might not enhance economic efficiency or overall social welfare. We show that the efficiency of constitutional judicial review is likely to vary within the larger institutional context
Most of us think that as a nation, the United States is and always has been very conscious of proper...
The Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution pro...
This Article proposes a fair return model for the takings clause. This conception of the clause has ...
American jurists traditionally have assumed that constitutional judicial review (the power of courts...
Since Madison, jurists of all ideological stripes have more or less casually presumed that constitut...
Constitutional protection of private property is grounded in a conflict between two legal principles...
The concept of property rights in Supreme Court constitutional analysis today is in flux. It has b...
This article analyses the Constitutional Court’s treatment of property interests in the face of stat...
In recent academic writing on the general problem of constitutional protection of property under the...
This article reviews Supreme Neglect: How to Revive Constitutional Protection for Private Property b...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This is the second of two articles developing a...
Is it justified for states to appropriate private property rights? If so, should governments expropr...
In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution can lead to...
The Constitution brought about a new compensation regime for expropriations. Compensation for exprop...
In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution can lead to...
Most of us think that as a nation, the United States is and always has been very conscious of proper...
The Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution pro...
This Article proposes a fair return model for the takings clause. This conception of the clause has ...
American jurists traditionally have assumed that constitutional judicial review (the power of courts...
Since Madison, jurists of all ideological stripes have more or less casually presumed that constitut...
Constitutional protection of private property is grounded in a conflict between two legal principles...
The concept of property rights in Supreme Court constitutional analysis today is in flux. It has b...
This article analyses the Constitutional Court’s treatment of property interests in the face of stat...
In recent academic writing on the general problem of constitutional protection of property under the...
This article reviews Supreme Neglect: How to Revive Constitutional Protection for Private Property b...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This is the second of two articles developing a...
Is it justified for states to appropriate private property rights? If so, should governments expropr...
In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution can lead to...
The Constitution brought about a new compensation regime for expropriations. Compensation for exprop...
In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution can lead to...
Most of us think that as a nation, the United States is and always has been very conscious of proper...
The Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution pro...
This Article proposes a fair return model for the takings clause. This conception of the clause has ...