Prof. Marla Mansfield, Professor of Law and NELPI Fellow The University of Tulsa College of Law, discusses the time aspects of takings
In an era of skepticism about common law traditions and sensitivity to claims of distributive injust...
Contemporary takings scholarship has devoted much attention to the problem of regulatory takings and...
Although it is axiomatic that property rights of infinite duration are necessary for owners to make ...
Prof. Marla Mansfield, Professor of Law and NELPI Fellow The University of Tulsa College of Law, dis...
This Article deals with time in two separate senses. In one sense, it is about how the categorical n...
The fee simple is often defined as an estate or interest of potentially infinite duration. This wa...
Richard Epstein adheres to what can fairly be called a libertarian model of law. Although he occas...
Time plays a key role in this book. The last two chapters discussed two reasons why time matters to ...
Although it is axiomatic that property rights of infinite duration are necessary for owners to make ...
This paper explores the emergence of perpetual property in a number of discrete areas of property la...
Since his classic book Takings appeared in 1985, Richard Epstein\u27s ideas have profoundly shaped d...
No area of property law has been more controversial in the past decade than takings. No aspect of co...
The word property had many meanings in 1789, as it does today, and a critical aspect of the ongoing ...
Leif Wenar examines the impact on takings scholarship of the redefinition of "property" early in th...
This Note will trace the evolution of regulatory temporary takings from its roots in traditional e...
In an era of skepticism about common law traditions and sensitivity to claims of distributive injust...
Contemporary takings scholarship has devoted much attention to the problem of regulatory takings and...
Although it is axiomatic that property rights of infinite duration are necessary for owners to make ...
Prof. Marla Mansfield, Professor of Law and NELPI Fellow The University of Tulsa College of Law, dis...
This Article deals with time in two separate senses. In one sense, it is about how the categorical n...
The fee simple is often defined as an estate or interest of potentially infinite duration. This wa...
Richard Epstein adheres to what can fairly be called a libertarian model of law. Although he occas...
Time plays a key role in this book. The last two chapters discussed two reasons why time matters to ...
Although it is axiomatic that property rights of infinite duration are necessary for owners to make ...
This paper explores the emergence of perpetual property in a number of discrete areas of property la...
Since his classic book Takings appeared in 1985, Richard Epstein\u27s ideas have profoundly shaped d...
No area of property law has been more controversial in the past decade than takings. No aspect of co...
The word property had many meanings in 1789, as it does today, and a critical aspect of the ongoing ...
Leif Wenar examines the impact on takings scholarship of the redefinition of "property" early in th...
This Note will trace the evolution of regulatory temporary takings from its roots in traditional e...
In an era of skepticism about common law traditions and sensitivity to claims of distributive injust...
Contemporary takings scholarship has devoted much attention to the problem of regulatory takings and...
Although it is axiomatic that property rights of infinite duration are necessary for owners to make ...