Theorists usually explain and evaluate property regimes either through the lens of economics or by conceptions of personhood. This Article argues that the two approaches are intertwined in a way that is usually overlooked. Property law both facilitates the efficient use and allocation of scarce resources and recognizes and protects aspects of personhood. Human beings are both resources for one another and the persons whose moral importance the legal system seeks to protect. This article explores how property law has addressed this paradox in the past and how it might in the future. Two bodies of nineteenth-century law highlighted this paradox: the law of labor discipline for slaves in the antebellum South and for free workers in the laissez...
While the everyday rhetoric around property rights tends to focus on land and land rights, I assert ...
Can--or should--the American property system adapt to curb the excesses inherent in the dominant for...
Man is a land animal, and everything that he requires for satisfaction of their material needs must ...
Theorists usually explain and evaluate property regimes either through the lens of economics or by c...
Property law facilitates the efficient use and allocation of scarce resources and recognizes and pro...
Using a historical and analytical approach, this paper explores the dual nature of the human right t...
For a sizable swath of the U.S. population, incomes and wealth are insufficient to cover life’s most...
In both his article Property as the Law of Things and his prior work, Professor Henry Smith has revi...
The means by which property organizes human behavior and social life is the subject of profound and ...
In positing a relationship between property and personhood, Margaret Jane Radin introduced an influe...
In this article, Professor Purdy identifies, articulates, and defends a normative approach to proper...
Society makes property. Economic systems are defined by what they allow to become property, and the ...
This article begins with a study of the political economy of welfare capitalism to demonstrate how t...
The advantages of privatized property regimes and common property regimes have been debated in legal...
Why and how is property created? Through a historical analysis, this paper proposes that property is...
While the everyday rhetoric around property rights tends to focus on land and land rights, I assert ...
Can--or should--the American property system adapt to curb the excesses inherent in the dominant for...
Man is a land animal, and everything that he requires for satisfaction of their material needs must ...
Theorists usually explain and evaluate property regimes either through the lens of economics or by c...
Property law facilitates the efficient use and allocation of scarce resources and recognizes and pro...
Using a historical and analytical approach, this paper explores the dual nature of the human right t...
For a sizable swath of the U.S. population, incomes and wealth are insufficient to cover life’s most...
In both his article Property as the Law of Things and his prior work, Professor Henry Smith has revi...
The means by which property organizes human behavior and social life is the subject of profound and ...
In positing a relationship between property and personhood, Margaret Jane Radin introduced an influe...
In this article, Professor Purdy identifies, articulates, and defends a normative approach to proper...
Society makes property. Economic systems are defined by what they allow to become property, and the ...
This article begins with a study of the political economy of welfare capitalism to demonstrate how t...
The advantages of privatized property regimes and common property regimes have been debated in legal...
Why and how is property created? Through a historical analysis, this paper proposes that property is...
While the everyday rhetoric around property rights tends to focus on land and land rights, I assert ...
Can--or should--the American property system adapt to curb the excesses inherent in the dominant for...
Man is a land animal, and everything that he requires for satisfaction of their material needs must ...