This article explores the problem of inadequate access and why owners of private property abutting public lands cannot fence out the public if their sole or primary purpose is to deny access to public land. The reasons why such landowners should not be allowed to put up fences, even on their own land, if the effect is to hinder the public\u27s access to public land are several. First, it is opportunistic and unjustly interferes with citizens\u27 ability to enjoy the interest they hold in public lands. Second, it denies citizens access rights rooted in the common law. Third, and perhaps most compelling, because of general notions of property ownership and the evolving public trust doctrine, the right to exclude the public to the extent of ac...
A Comment on Bruce R. Huber, The Durability of Private Claims to Public Property, 102 GEO. L.J. 991 ...
Property rights and resource use are closely related. Scholarly inquiry about their relation, howeve...
In 2005, the United States took by eminent domain about 32.42 acres of prime San Diego coastland tha...
This article explores the problem of inadequate access and why owners of private property abutting p...
The topic of the balance between public and private interests in land is one of growing importance a...
The public trust doctrine is often accused of undermining property rights, when in fact the doctrine...
This Note examines one mechanism by which the courts might supervise public land administration: the...
Among the many competing interests in the field of land use controls, there is perhaps none more fun...
In response to the ongoing debate over how much of the surface real estate reclaimed by the Big Dig ...
Real burdens, or land-use servitudes as they are called in the United States, are usually thought ...
This article attempts to understand the radical reform of Scottish land law in its provision for a g...
Whether people have an independent right of access to walk on land they do not own is a question ans...
This Article advocates that courts should distinguish between typical land use regulation and should...
In Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council, the Supreme Court held that, when a regulation has depri...
This article will examine the major missions and jurisdictions of the main federal land management s...
A Comment on Bruce R. Huber, The Durability of Private Claims to Public Property, 102 GEO. L.J. 991 ...
Property rights and resource use are closely related. Scholarly inquiry about their relation, howeve...
In 2005, the United States took by eminent domain about 32.42 acres of prime San Diego coastland tha...
This article explores the problem of inadequate access and why owners of private property abutting p...
The topic of the balance between public and private interests in land is one of growing importance a...
The public trust doctrine is often accused of undermining property rights, when in fact the doctrine...
This Note examines one mechanism by which the courts might supervise public land administration: the...
Among the many competing interests in the field of land use controls, there is perhaps none more fun...
In response to the ongoing debate over how much of the surface real estate reclaimed by the Big Dig ...
Real burdens, or land-use servitudes as they are called in the United States, are usually thought ...
This article attempts to understand the radical reform of Scottish land law in its provision for a g...
Whether people have an independent right of access to walk on land they do not own is a question ans...
This Article advocates that courts should distinguish between typical land use regulation and should...
In Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council, the Supreme Court held that, when a regulation has depri...
This article will examine the major missions and jurisdictions of the main federal land management s...
A Comment on Bruce R. Huber, The Durability of Private Claims to Public Property, 102 GEO. L.J. 991 ...
Property rights and resource use are closely related. Scholarly inquiry about their relation, howeve...
In 2005, the United States took by eminent domain about 32.42 acres of prime San Diego coastland tha...