Informal real estate markets have developed as a result of deficiencies of formal real estate markets and play a crucial role in providing housing to the urban poor. This contribution combines an adaptation of Ostrom's rules with property rights theory to study the rules that have developed in the informal real estate, their spatial impact and implications of formal-informal interactions in an informal settlement in Nairobi, Kenya. It is argued that although the nature of formal and informal property rights regimes is highly similar, conflicts arise when the two concur as they are based on different forms of legitimacy: input and output legitimacy. To the formal market, the informal market is illegitimate as it infringes on formal property ...
This book represents a major innovation in the institutional analysis of cities and their planning, ...
This study investigated the phenomenon whereby settlements with ostensibly similar socio- economic s...
Normative approaches to urban governance and planning and idealised visions of city space too often ...
Informal real estate markets have developed as a result of deficiencies of formal real estate market...
Improving access to adequate housing is a global development priority. Formalisation of property rig...
The literature indicates that most housing in the urban areas of many countries in the global South ...
This article addresses a series of paradoxes regarding informal settlements in cities in the develop...
This paper looks at the concept of law and urban development with a focus on property rights and lan...
We propose a theory of urban land use with endogenous property rights that applies to cities in deve...
Copyright © 2014 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Common...
Property rights systems and their relationship to the informal spaces are a contested and highly rel...
This work represents a major innovation in the institutional analysis of cities and their planning, ...
While there is an extensive literature on squatter housing and infonnal set tlements, there is at p...
Recent policy pronouncements in many sub-Saharan African cities strive to accommodate informal trade...
This paper is about the contested use of urban space, focusing on the appropriation of informal trad...
This book represents a major innovation in the institutional analysis of cities and their planning, ...
This study investigated the phenomenon whereby settlements with ostensibly similar socio- economic s...
Normative approaches to urban governance and planning and idealised visions of city space too often ...
Informal real estate markets have developed as a result of deficiencies of formal real estate market...
Improving access to adequate housing is a global development priority. Formalisation of property rig...
The literature indicates that most housing in the urban areas of many countries in the global South ...
This article addresses a series of paradoxes regarding informal settlements in cities in the develop...
This paper looks at the concept of law and urban development with a focus on property rights and lan...
We propose a theory of urban land use with endogenous property rights that applies to cities in deve...
Copyright © 2014 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Common...
Property rights systems and their relationship to the informal spaces are a contested and highly rel...
This work represents a major innovation in the institutional analysis of cities and their planning, ...
While there is an extensive literature on squatter housing and infonnal set tlements, there is at p...
Recent policy pronouncements in many sub-Saharan African cities strive to accommodate informal trade...
This paper is about the contested use of urban space, focusing on the appropriation of informal trad...
This book represents a major innovation in the institutional analysis of cities and their planning, ...
This study investigated the phenomenon whereby settlements with ostensibly similar socio- economic s...
Normative approaches to urban governance and planning and idealised visions of city space too often ...