How do governments create – or in some countries recreate - basic property rights that citizens demand in the transition to a market economy? My first comment, quite briefly, is on the debate within this Symposium on the relationship between constitutional reforms and the emergence of new property regimes. Second, I will comment on the counterintuitive property rights regime that is emerging from the big bang – the post-1989 collapse of the old socialist legal order in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union and its replacement with a new, market-oriented system of property rights
In the post-1989 world, the primacy of private property is taken for granted. The final fall of comm...
High economic growth rates after World War II characterized both socialism and capitalism. There wer...
In the first decade after the collapse of Communism, Russia became notorious for conflicts around co...
How do governments create - or in some countries recreate - basic property rights that citizens dema...
Using the experiences of Eastern Europe as an example, this article argues that, contrary to the eco...
The conception of property that a transitional state adopts is critically important because it affec...
The concept of property rights in Supreme Court constitutional analysis today is in flux. It has b...
North (1994) famously remarked that ‘it is the polity that defines and enforces property rights’. Th...
This part of the Symposium seeks to answer a number of interesting questions. One is how Western law...
Establishing secure property rights hi transiton economies amounts to solvng two problems: inefficie...
The collapse of socialist regimes has revived an interest in property rights allover the world, as o...
In Property as the Keystone Right?, Professor Carol Rose examines the claim that the protection of p...
Why is it that countries that implement property laws do not always perform according to the expecta...
How does the lack of legitimacy of property rights affect the dynamics of the creation of the rule o...
Erworben im Rahmen der Schweizer Nationallizenzen (http://www.nationallizenzen.ch)North (1994) famou...
In the post-1989 world, the primacy of private property is taken for granted. The final fall of comm...
High economic growth rates after World War II characterized both socialism and capitalism. There wer...
In the first decade after the collapse of Communism, Russia became notorious for conflicts around co...
How do governments create - or in some countries recreate - basic property rights that citizens dema...
Using the experiences of Eastern Europe as an example, this article argues that, contrary to the eco...
The conception of property that a transitional state adopts is critically important because it affec...
The concept of property rights in Supreme Court constitutional analysis today is in flux. It has b...
North (1994) famously remarked that ‘it is the polity that defines and enforces property rights’. Th...
This part of the Symposium seeks to answer a number of interesting questions. One is how Western law...
Establishing secure property rights hi transiton economies amounts to solvng two problems: inefficie...
The collapse of socialist regimes has revived an interest in property rights allover the world, as o...
In Property as the Keystone Right?, Professor Carol Rose examines the claim that the protection of p...
Why is it that countries that implement property laws do not always perform according to the expecta...
How does the lack of legitimacy of property rights affect the dynamics of the creation of the rule o...
Erworben im Rahmen der Schweizer Nationallizenzen (http://www.nationallizenzen.ch)North (1994) famou...
In the post-1989 world, the primacy of private property is taken for granted. The final fall of comm...
High economic growth rates after World War II characterized both socialism and capitalism. There wer...
In the first decade after the collapse of Communism, Russia became notorious for conflicts around co...