Quasi-property interests refer to situations in which the law seeks to simulate the idea of exclusion, normally associated with property rights, through a relational liability regime, by focusing on the nature and circumstances of the interaction in question, which is thought to merit a highly circumscribed form of exclusion. In this Article, I unpack the analytical and normative bases of quasi-property interests, examine the primary triggering events that cause courts to invoke the category, and respond to potential objections to the recognition of quasi-property as an independent category of interests in the law
Property rights have long been associated with a simple and distinctive technology: exclusion. But t...
In 1998 I published a short essay entitled Property and the Right to Exclude. It appeared in an issu...
Property law has eluded both a consistent definition and a unified conceptual framework. Instrumenta...
Quasi-property interests refer to situations in which the law seeks to simulate the idea of exclusio...
Courts and commentators struggle to apply privacy law in a way that conforms to the intuitions of th...
The article discusses the concept of private property and the characteristics applied to assess whet...
The article provides a set of criteria from which to assess whether or not certain rights and intere...
This article presents an empirical legal study in the field of property theory. I take as my point o...
This Article examines a characteristic of property entitlements fundamental to the structure of prop...
The Supreme Court is fond of saying that the right to exclude others is one of the most essential...
Exclusion theorists of property think that the concept of property properly concerns only the relati...
Under contemporary American law, human corpses and some bodily parts are classified as quasi-propert...
Recent scholarship has created renewed interest in the “right to exclude.” Many contend that, becaus...
The problem of identifying the object of the property right from other civil law institutions and no...
Notwithstanding its importance, property law has eluded both a consistent definition and a unified c...
Property rights have long been associated with a simple and distinctive technology: exclusion. But t...
In 1998 I published a short essay entitled Property and the Right to Exclude. It appeared in an issu...
Property law has eluded both a consistent definition and a unified conceptual framework. Instrumenta...
Quasi-property interests refer to situations in which the law seeks to simulate the idea of exclusio...
Courts and commentators struggle to apply privacy law in a way that conforms to the intuitions of th...
The article discusses the concept of private property and the characteristics applied to assess whet...
The article provides a set of criteria from which to assess whether or not certain rights and intere...
This article presents an empirical legal study in the field of property theory. I take as my point o...
This Article examines a characteristic of property entitlements fundamental to the structure of prop...
The Supreme Court is fond of saying that the right to exclude others is one of the most essential...
Exclusion theorists of property think that the concept of property properly concerns only the relati...
Under contemporary American law, human corpses and some bodily parts are classified as quasi-propert...
Recent scholarship has created renewed interest in the “right to exclude.” Many contend that, becaus...
The problem of identifying the object of the property right from other civil law institutions and no...
Notwithstanding its importance, property law has eluded both a consistent definition and a unified c...
Property rights have long been associated with a simple and distinctive technology: exclusion. But t...
In 1998 I published a short essay entitled Property and the Right to Exclude. It appeared in an issu...
Property law has eluded both a consistent definition and a unified conceptual framework. Instrumenta...