Legal rights may erode as a result of past, uncontested, breach. In light of ongoing violations, the rightholder's enforcement may result in the loss of the entitlement. The doctrines, of course, of performance in contract law and adverse possession in property law are prominent examples of this widespread erosion phenomenon. In analyzing the effects of such laws, the Article confronts two conflicting intuitions. On the one hand, the "license" to continue breach prospectively encourages opportunism. On the other hand, the risk of erosion may reinforce the rightholder's motivation to take anti-erosion measures, bolstering the credibility of the threat to enforce, thus better preserving the entitlement. The article proves that these two...
Loss of use is fundamentally about the denial of property rights regardless of its intended use. Pr...
Legal rights impose concomitant legal burdens. This paper considers the valuation and disposition of...
The article argues that the fetters on the exercise of unilateral contractual discretionary powers t...
Legal rights may erode as a result of past, uncontested, breach. In light of ongoing violations, th...
This Article investigates the distinction between breach of license and infringement of property rig...
This Comment on Omri Ben-Shahar\u27s excellent article makes two points: 1. Entitlements might be mo...
This article addresses a still unsolved puzzle in private law regarding the proper explanation of ca...
This Essay concerns the different ways that policymakers can protect legal entitlements. The notion ...
In this Article, we demonstrate, contrary to conventional wisdom, that all rights are relationally c...
This Article argues that recent developments in economic theory provide a new rationale for the dich...
In an important article, Calabresi and Melamed distinguish two different techniques for protecting l...
The legal construction of the aspect of abuse of substantive right is one of the most important man...
In many states, past property theft is a volatile political issue that threatens to destabilize nasc...
When a contract is breached the law in most jurisdictions provides some version of the aphorism that...
The Theft Act 1968 (UK) marked a major reform of United Kingdom criminal law resulting in numerous o...
Loss of use is fundamentally about the denial of property rights regardless of its intended use. Pr...
Legal rights impose concomitant legal burdens. This paper considers the valuation and disposition of...
The article argues that the fetters on the exercise of unilateral contractual discretionary powers t...
Legal rights may erode as a result of past, uncontested, breach. In light of ongoing violations, th...
This Article investigates the distinction between breach of license and infringement of property rig...
This Comment on Omri Ben-Shahar\u27s excellent article makes two points: 1. Entitlements might be mo...
This article addresses a still unsolved puzzle in private law regarding the proper explanation of ca...
This Essay concerns the different ways that policymakers can protect legal entitlements. The notion ...
In this Article, we demonstrate, contrary to conventional wisdom, that all rights are relationally c...
This Article argues that recent developments in economic theory provide a new rationale for the dich...
In an important article, Calabresi and Melamed distinguish two different techniques for protecting l...
The legal construction of the aspect of abuse of substantive right is one of the most important man...
In many states, past property theft is a volatile political issue that threatens to destabilize nasc...
When a contract is breached the law in most jurisdictions provides some version of the aphorism that...
The Theft Act 1968 (UK) marked a major reform of United Kingdom criminal law resulting in numerous o...
Loss of use is fundamentally about the denial of property rights regardless of its intended use. Pr...
Legal rights impose concomitant legal burdens. This paper considers the valuation and disposition of...
The article argues that the fetters on the exercise of unilateral contractual discretionary powers t...