Rerum Novarum, the papal encyclical of Pope Leo XIII, has had a major impact on Catholic thinking. Issued in 1891 it immediately received much public attention. This was especially the case in the United States where it was seen as the response re-affirming the sanctity of private property long sought by the American bishops in the public debates with Henry George and his supporters. George was a central public figure in the United States, England and Ireland, whose speeches and writings supported free market ideas, especially free trade. But, George's main idea was that the sole tax should be a singletax on land values.His justification seemed to place the sanctity of private property in doubt. Since some Catholics were strong supporters o...
The two most recent paradigmatic moments in the development of property law were the construction of...
The reforms relating to the Church’s property were an important component of Joseph H’s entire refor...
This paper considers how the English episcopate's complaints (gravamina) of 1253 demonstrate one vie...
The importance of private property has been controversial in Catholic social thought and teaching do...
The defense of private property has generally been a key principle of Catholic social teaching. In s...
In an open letter to all Catholics, Pope Leo XIII addressed the conditions of the working classes, t...
Twentieth-century Eastern Europe was a vivid example of what the encyclical Rerum Novarum prophesied...
Utopians do not like private property. In one of the most notorious incidents of the Reformation era...
During the 1860\u27s Henry Edward Manning, who had recently converted to Roman Catholicism, advanced...
Abstract: It is known that the doctrine of property as an individual natural right expounded in the ...
Individual Research Project Research in progress for HIST 1302: United States History II Faculty Men...
[Extract] It is easy to forget that those sixteenth-century German princes and cities who defended t...
This dissertation examines William of Ockham's theory of property rights in the Opus nonaginta dieru...
The author points out that the origins of individualism can be found as late as in ancient and medie...
Beginning with Leo XIII, a growing body of social doctrine was developed in keeping with world even...
The two most recent paradigmatic moments in the development of property law were the construction of...
The reforms relating to the Church’s property were an important component of Joseph H’s entire refor...
This paper considers how the English episcopate's complaints (gravamina) of 1253 demonstrate one vie...
The importance of private property has been controversial in Catholic social thought and teaching do...
The defense of private property has generally been a key principle of Catholic social teaching. In s...
In an open letter to all Catholics, Pope Leo XIII addressed the conditions of the working classes, t...
Twentieth-century Eastern Europe was a vivid example of what the encyclical Rerum Novarum prophesied...
Utopians do not like private property. In one of the most notorious incidents of the Reformation era...
During the 1860\u27s Henry Edward Manning, who had recently converted to Roman Catholicism, advanced...
Abstract: It is known that the doctrine of property as an individual natural right expounded in the ...
Individual Research Project Research in progress for HIST 1302: United States History II Faculty Men...
[Extract] It is easy to forget that those sixteenth-century German princes and cities who defended t...
This dissertation examines William of Ockham's theory of property rights in the Opus nonaginta dieru...
The author points out that the origins of individualism can be found as late as in ancient and medie...
Beginning with Leo XIII, a growing body of social doctrine was developed in keeping with world even...
The two most recent paradigmatic moments in the development of property law were the construction of...
The reforms relating to the Church’s property were an important component of Joseph H’s entire refor...
This paper considers how the English episcopate's complaints (gravamina) of 1253 demonstrate one vie...