This article adopts a definition of property rights from legal scholarship: A property right (in contrast to a contractual right) is enforceable, not only against the parties to a contract, but also against third parties outside the contract. In a financial contracting setting, we ask: When should the law enforce a lender's contractual protections as property rights, given that these rights may be hidden and costly for other lenders to discover? Our model explains why the law limits the creation and enforceability of property rights, and develops principles of optimal enforceability. These principles are often reflected in the law
A central difference between contract and property concerns the freedom to customize legally enfor...
We first point out that the recent property-rights literature is based on three assumptions: (l) tha...
Property law has eluded both a consistent definition and a unified conceptual framework. Instrumenta...
This article adopts a definition of property rights from legal scholarship: A property right (in con...
This article adopts a definition of property rights from legal scholarship: A property right (in con...
In this paper we propose a theory of optimal property rights in a financial contracting setting. Fol...
Property rights and contract law are two of our most basic legal categories. Many legal scholars des...
We identify a key trade-off between protecting property rights and enhancing reliance on contracts. ...
In theory, property rights allow markets to achieve Pareto optimal allocations. But the literature o...
Property Rules, as famously described by Calabresi and Melamed, are remedial rules that place a proh...
The law of every jurisdiction defines a set of well-recognized forms that property rights can take a...
Existing literature on property rights stresses the effect that distortions in future investment dec...
This chapter examines the economics of property rights and property law. Property law is a fundament...
This article develops and tests a theory of the institutions that make property rights viable, ensur...
A central difference between contract and property concerns the freedom to customize legally enfor...
We first point out that the recent property-rights literature is based on three assumptions: (l) tha...
Property law has eluded both a consistent definition and a unified conceptual framework. Instrumenta...
This article adopts a definition of property rights from legal scholarship: A property right (in con...
This article adopts a definition of property rights from legal scholarship: A property right (in con...
In this paper we propose a theory of optimal property rights in a financial contracting setting. Fol...
Property rights and contract law are two of our most basic legal categories. Many legal scholars des...
We identify a key trade-off between protecting property rights and enhancing reliance on contracts. ...
In theory, property rights allow markets to achieve Pareto optimal allocations. But the literature o...
Property Rules, as famously described by Calabresi and Melamed, are remedial rules that place a proh...
The law of every jurisdiction defines a set of well-recognized forms that property rights can take a...
Existing literature on property rights stresses the effect that distortions in future investment dec...
This chapter examines the economics of property rights and property law. Property law is a fundament...
This article develops and tests a theory of the institutions that make property rights viable, ensur...
A central difference between contract and property concerns the freedom to customize legally enfor...
We first point out that the recent property-rights literature is based on three assumptions: (l) tha...
Property law has eluded both a consistent definition and a unified conceptual framework. Instrumenta...