This paper is a comment on the work of Hernando de Soto, who has done so much to highlight the importance of property rights, especially in the context of what I will call migrant communities within developing countries. These are the shantytowns of Peru, the favelas of Brazil, and the bidonvilles of Haiti. De Soto characterizes these communities as “extralegal zones.” They consist, in his words, of “modest homes cramped together on city perimeters, a myriad of workshops in their midst, armies of vendors hawking their wares on the streets, and countless crisscrossing minibus lines.” I am interested in de Soto’s work on these migrant communities for two reasons, which are related
The 1995 constitution vested land in the Citizens of Uganda. Accordingly, in 1998, the Parliament pa...
A Model for Humane Economic Development: Hernando de Soto, Property Rights, and the Preferential Opt...
The crux of De Soto's argument revolves around why nations of the developing world are desperately i...
This paper is a comment on the work of Hernando de Soto, who has done so much to highlight the impor...
Hernando de Soto’s global best-seller, The Mystery of Capital, has transformed the previously obscur...
In this paper we explore the substitutability of formal and informal property rights. We analyze new...
Hernando de Soto's analysis of the high cost of establishing, protecting and trading in property rig...
Giving the poor legal title to the lands they occupy extra-legally (informally) has been widely prom...
Based largely on economist, Hernando de Soto’s, work many developing countries have implemented prog...
Rule of Law and Development: Formation, Implementation and Improvement of Law and Governance in Deve...
The master's thesis discusses a development concept inspired by the Peruvian economist Hernando de S...
This article develops the idea that control over somebody's migration can be understood as a propert...
Presumption of a direct causal link between formalisation of property rights and economic productiv...
430 pagesIndigenous and Afro-descendant peoples throughout Latin America have mobilized to demand th...
textDuring the decade of 1950s, the intensive rural to urban migration, in search for new job opport...
The 1995 constitution vested land in the Citizens of Uganda. Accordingly, in 1998, the Parliament pa...
A Model for Humane Economic Development: Hernando de Soto, Property Rights, and the Preferential Opt...
The crux of De Soto's argument revolves around why nations of the developing world are desperately i...
This paper is a comment on the work of Hernando de Soto, who has done so much to highlight the impor...
Hernando de Soto’s global best-seller, The Mystery of Capital, has transformed the previously obscur...
In this paper we explore the substitutability of formal and informal property rights. We analyze new...
Hernando de Soto's analysis of the high cost of establishing, protecting and trading in property rig...
Giving the poor legal title to the lands they occupy extra-legally (informally) has been widely prom...
Based largely on economist, Hernando de Soto’s, work many developing countries have implemented prog...
Rule of Law and Development: Formation, Implementation and Improvement of Law and Governance in Deve...
The master's thesis discusses a development concept inspired by the Peruvian economist Hernando de S...
This article develops the idea that control over somebody's migration can be understood as a propert...
Presumption of a direct causal link between formalisation of property rights and economic productiv...
430 pagesIndigenous and Afro-descendant peoples throughout Latin America have mobilized to demand th...
textDuring the decade of 1950s, the intensive rural to urban migration, in search for new job opport...
The 1995 constitution vested land in the Citizens of Uganda. Accordingly, in 1998, the Parliament pa...
A Model for Humane Economic Development: Hernando de Soto, Property Rights, and the Preferential Opt...
The crux of De Soto's argument revolves around why nations of the developing world are desperately i...