Our land use control system operates across a variety of multidimensional and dynamic categories. Learning to navigate within and between these categories requires an appreciation for their interconnected, dynamic, and textured components and an awareness of alternative mechanisms for achieving one’s land use control preferences and one’s desired ends. Whether seeking to minimize controls as a property owner or attempting to place controls on the land uses of another, one should take time to understand the full ecology of the system. This Article looks at four broad categories of control: (1) no controls, or the state of nature; (2) judicial land use controls and initial assignments based on inherent rights and obligations arising as intrin...
Land use control in America has always been an intensely local area of the law. Modem land use law, ...
We model residential land use constraints as the outcome of a political economy game between owners ...
The theme of this special volume is “Challenging Traditional Notions of Property in Land Use Plannin...
Our land use control system operates across a variety of multidimensional and dynamic categories. Le...
Property in land suffers from an unacknowledged precautionary deficit. Ownership is dispensed in sta...
This article describes how the American land use system has evolved to address recent environmental ...
Property rights are managed well by the modern economy. They are supported both theoretically and ad...
To achieve sustainable development, governments have increasingly turned to legislating new rights, ...
Today, there is growing recognition that land management needs to focus on the sustainable use of la...
This article proposes a new way of looking at property relationships that will enrich our understand...
Is land use planning fundamentally different from other forms of central planning? If so, does that ...
This article proposes an analytic framework to describe variation in forms of land-related conflict ...
The implications of ownership When you own the land, things are different. In the “bundle of sticks ...
With increasing frequency commentators have been urging greater reliance on the market mechanism to ...
Contemporary Western legal theory is posited on a claim that property rights have ‘evolved’ as a res...
Land use control in America has always been an intensely local area of the law. Modem land use law, ...
We model residential land use constraints as the outcome of a political economy game between owners ...
The theme of this special volume is “Challenging Traditional Notions of Property in Land Use Plannin...
Our land use control system operates across a variety of multidimensional and dynamic categories. Le...
Property in land suffers from an unacknowledged precautionary deficit. Ownership is dispensed in sta...
This article describes how the American land use system has evolved to address recent environmental ...
Property rights are managed well by the modern economy. They are supported both theoretically and ad...
To achieve sustainable development, governments have increasingly turned to legislating new rights, ...
Today, there is growing recognition that land management needs to focus on the sustainable use of la...
This article proposes a new way of looking at property relationships that will enrich our understand...
Is land use planning fundamentally different from other forms of central planning? If so, does that ...
This article proposes an analytic framework to describe variation in forms of land-related conflict ...
The implications of ownership When you own the land, things are different. In the “bundle of sticks ...
With increasing frequency commentators have been urging greater reliance on the market mechanism to ...
Contemporary Western legal theory is posited on a claim that property rights have ‘evolved’ as a res...
Land use control in America has always been an intensely local area of the law. Modem land use law, ...
We model residential land use constraints as the outcome of a political economy game between owners ...
The theme of this special volume is “Challenging Traditional Notions of Property in Land Use Plannin...