[Extract] It used to be that 'a man's house is his castle' and indeed this aphorism is reflected in the common law doctrine of cuius est solum, eius est usque ad coelum et ad inferos or he who owns the soil is theirs up to heaven and down to hell. Increasingly however this doctrine has been narrowed as interests in land have become unbundled.\ud I draw a distinction here between the recognition that one cannot literally own 'up to heaven' or 'down to hell' and what is considered to constitute 'land'
Is land use planning fundamentally different from other forms of central planning? If so, does that ...
It is clear from the High Court's decisions in Wik and Ward that, for the purpose of the statutory r...
The Law Commission’s Consultation Paper (No 186, 2008) on Easements, Covenants and Profìts à Prendre...
[Extract] It used to be that 'a man's house is his castle' and indeed this aphorism is reflected in ...
This Article seizes on a specific doctrinal discussion in Eric Claeys’s Natural Property Rights to a...
This Article argues that recent developments in economic theory provide a new rationale for the dich...
The unilateral and unqualified nature of the right to abandon (at least as it is usually described) ...
Because human beings are fated to live mostly on the surface of the earth, the pattern of entitlemen...
In this field of ‘immovables studies’ we are constantly balancing between the pubic and the private ...
This Article is concerned with a dilemma in the law of Future Interests. The dilemma stems from the ...
This paper disserts land ownership restrictions. Land ownership is restricted more intensively than ...
Contemporary Western legal theory is posited on a claim that property rights have ‘evolved’ as a res...
A revolutionary book by De Soto to formalize land tenure by changing “dead capital” to “life capital...
It is impossible to apply the artificial rules of the modern law of real property without a clear un...
Over the last five centuries, the commodification of land has fundamentally helped and shaped the ex...
Is land use planning fundamentally different from other forms of central planning? If so, does that ...
It is clear from the High Court's decisions in Wik and Ward that, for the purpose of the statutory r...
The Law Commission’s Consultation Paper (No 186, 2008) on Easements, Covenants and Profìts à Prendre...
[Extract] It used to be that 'a man's house is his castle' and indeed this aphorism is reflected in ...
This Article seizes on a specific doctrinal discussion in Eric Claeys’s Natural Property Rights to a...
This Article argues that recent developments in economic theory provide a new rationale for the dich...
The unilateral and unqualified nature of the right to abandon (at least as it is usually described) ...
Because human beings are fated to live mostly on the surface of the earth, the pattern of entitlemen...
In this field of ‘immovables studies’ we are constantly balancing between the pubic and the private ...
This Article is concerned with a dilemma in the law of Future Interests. The dilemma stems from the ...
This paper disserts land ownership restrictions. Land ownership is restricted more intensively than ...
Contemporary Western legal theory is posited on a claim that property rights have ‘evolved’ as a res...
A revolutionary book by De Soto to formalize land tenure by changing “dead capital” to “life capital...
It is impossible to apply the artificial rules of the modern law of real property without a clear un...
Over the last five centuries, the commodification of land has fundamentally helped and shaped the ex...
Is land use planning fundamentally different from other forms of central planning? If so, does that ...
It is clear from the High Court's decisions in Wik and Ward that, for the purpose of the statutory r...
The Law Commission’s Consultation Paper (No 186, 2008) on Easements, Covenants and Profìts à Prendre...