Book Chapter Daniel B. Kelly, Acquiring Land Through Eminent Domain: Justifications, Limitations, and Alternatives, in Research Handbook on the Economics of Property Law 344 (Kenneth Ayotte & Henry E. Smith eds., 2011) The primary functional justifications for eminent domain involve bargaining problems, including the holdout problem, the bilateral monopoly problem and other transaction costs, as well as the existence of externalities. The holdout problem is particularly noteworthy, and this chapter analyzes three types of holdouts, depending on whether the failure in bargaining is the result of strategic behavior among owners, the presence of a large number of owners or a single owner who is unwilling to sell because of a highly idiosyncrat...
Eminent Domain is the power of the government or quasi-government entities to take private or public...
When acquiring private property, governments may exercise one of three options: confiscation, consen...
The exercise of eminent domain by the State to undertake compulsory acquisition of property for publ...
Governments employ two basic policies for acquiring land: taking it through the exercise of their po...
A theoretical analysis of land assembly with and without eminent domain concludes that, contrary to ...
A substantial literature identifies seller holdout as a serious obstacle to land assembly, implying ...
As López and Totah note, “The U. S. Supreme Court’s 5-4 decision in theproperty-rights case Kelo v. ...
This Article challenges a foundational assumption about eminent domain - namely, that owners are sys...
The holdout problem is commonly cited as the justification for eminent domain, but the nature of the...
The eminent domain clause of the U.S. Constitution concerns the limits of the government\u27s right ...
Eminent domain has been a government power for centuries. In most cases, eminent domain is used to p...
In Shapiro and Pincus (2008), we proposed a method for arriving at just compensation of private owne...
207 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1993.Chapter I. The microeconomic ...
Therapeutic jurisprudence provides an excellent tool to analyze and guide the development of the law...
Efficiency and equity in the use of eminent domain, with local externalities Jonathan Pincus and Per...
Eminent Domain is the power of the government or quasi-government entities to take private or public...
When acquiring private property, governments may exercise one of three options: confiscation, consen...
The exercise of eminent domain by the State to undertake compulsory acquisition of property for publ...
Governments employ two basic policies for acquiring land: taking it through the exercise of their po...
A theoretical analysis of land assembly with and without eminent domain concludes that, contrary to ...
A substantial literature identifies seller holdout as a serious obstacle to land assembly, implying ...
As López and Totah note, “The U. S. Supreme Court’s 5-4 decision in theproperty-rights case Kelo v. ...
This Article challenges a foundational assumption about eminent domain - namely, that owners are sys...
The holdout problem is commonly cited as the justification for eminent domain, but the nature of the...
The eminent domain clause of the U.S. Constitution concerns the limits of the government\u27s right ...
Eminent domain has been a government power for centuries. In most cases, eminent domain is used to p...
In Shapiro and Pincus (2008), we proposed a method for arriving at just compensation of private owne...
207 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1993.Chapter I. The microeconomic ...
Therapeutic jurisprudence provides an excellent tool to analyze and guide the development of the law...
Efficiency and equity in the use of eminent domain, with local externalities Jonathan Pincus and Per...
Eminent Domain is the power of the government or quasi-government entities to take private or public...
When acquiring private property, governments may exercise one of three options: confiscation, consen...
The exercise of eminent domain by the State to undertake compulsory acquisition of property for publ...