The practice of giving the wealthy perpetual control of their assets is re-emerging in an era of great wealth inequality, long after it had been banned in common law countries. The philosophical justification for such control rests on the claim that there are posthumous rights to wealth, and that such rights do not extend in problematic way to other goods, such as political suffrage. On the basis of such a claim, we give people freedom of testation, and deem them vulnerable to posthumous harm. I present a short history of legally sanctioned posthumous control of property in common law, and I argue that its philosophical justification is untenable. No principled case for posthumous rights to wealth survives scrutiny, and the large and powerf...
publication-status: Publishedtypes: Article“The final publication is available at Springer via http:...
This chapter asks the question: what happens when the state’s form of legalism no longer recognizes ...
Abstract: How does a democratic state legitimize strong property rights when property arrangem...
This article discusses a basic paradox at the core of liberal property law. Individual freedom to di...
This article suggests the policy and social justifications against dead hand control far outweigh tr...
This article examines how decedents are treated across a variety of legal disciplines and asks why t...
Publicity rights, or the rights to the use of one’s image and likeness, are a relatively recent form...
The organizing principle of American succession law—testamentary freedom—gives decedents a nearly un...
The substantial passage of wealth that occurs upon death in the United States each year brings into ...
Encouraged primarily by a fluke in federal estate and gift law, more than half of the states have ei...
The organizing principle of American succession law — testamentary freedom — gives decedents a nearl...
Under contemporary American law, human corpses and some bodily parts are classified as quasi-propert...
The inevitability of the death of all property owners means that the redistribution of property at d...
In ancien régime criminal law, the confiscation of the whole of the property was a punishment for se...
The law protects posthumous bodily integrity by allowing people to decide what will happen to their ...
publication-status: Publishedtypes: Article“The final publication is available at Springer via http:...
This chapter asks the question: what happens when the state’s form of legalism no longer recognizes ...
Abstract: How does a democratic state legitimize strong property rights when property arrangem...
This article discusses a basic paradox at the core of liberal property law. Individual freedom to di...
This article suggests the policy and social justifications against dead hand control far outweigh tr...
This article examines how decedents are treated across a variety of legal disciplines and asks why t...
Publicity rights, or the rights to the use of one’s image and likeness, are a relatively recent form...
The organizing principle of American succession law—testamentary freedom—gives decedents a nearly un...
The substantial passage of wealth that occurs upon death in the United States each year brings into ...
Encouraged primarily by a fluke in federal estate and gift law, more than half of the states have ei...
The organizing principle of American succession law — testamentary freedom — gives decedents a nearl...
Under contemporary American law, human corpses and some bodily parts are classified as quasi-propert...
The inevitability of the death of all property owners means that the redistribution of property at d...
In ancien régime criminal law, the confiscation of the whole of the property was a punishment for se...
The law protects posthumous bodily integrity by allowing people to decide what will happen to their ...
publication-status: Publishedtypes: Article“The final publication is available at Springer via http:...
This chapter asks the question: what happens when the state’s form of legalism no longer recognizes ...
Abstract: How does a democratic state legitimize strong property rights when property arrangem...