Inspired by Hugo Grotius (1583-1645), Mathias Risse has recently argued forcefully that any property or territorial arrangement that fails to provide the global population with an equal opportunity to satisfy basic needs is unjust: it violates natural rights of common ownership. This chapter argues that Grotius and Risse theorize Collective Ownership of the Earth in rival ways. Risse develops a theory of justice: COE generates moral rights that restrain the acceptability of exclusionary regimes. Grotius, by contrast, advances a theory of property: what shape should we give to conventionally instituted individual property rights, given that the earth originally belongs to everyone? This chapter focuses on the right of necessity to illustrate...
Property rights are central to debates over distributive justice. In this dissertation, I defend thr...
The central argument of this thesis is that the institution of private property reflects an anthropo...
Private property ordinarily triggers notions of individual rights, not social obligations. The core ...
Inspired by Hugo Grotius (1583-1645), Mathias Risse has recently argued forcefully that any property...
In On Global Justice, Mathias Risse claims that the earth’s original resources are collectively owne...
Many theories of global distributive justice are based on the assumption that all humans hold common...
Many theories of global distributive justice are based on the assumption that all humans hold common...
The paper contrasts Kant's conception of original common possession of the earth with Hugo Grotius's...
[full article, abstract in English; abstract in Lithuanian] During the last few years, it has bec...
That humanity collectively owns the earth was the guiding idea of 17th century political philosophy,...
Contemporary Western legal theory is posited on a claim that property rights have ‘evolved’ as a res...
At the basis of modern natural law theories, the concept of the suum, or what belongs to the person ...
The Earth and jurisprudence are both systems. The Earth is a system of physical and interlinked rela...
We use rules to decide what to do with scarce resources. Questions about rules matter insofar as we ...
This paper first recalls that the primitive phase of international law is deeply entangled with that...
Property rights are central to debates over distributive justice. In this dissertation, I defend thr...
The central argument of this thesis is that the institution of private property reflects an anthropo...
Private property ordinarily triggers notions of individual rights, not social obligations. The core ...
Inspired by Hugo Grotius (1583-1645), Mathias Risse has recently argued forcefully that any property...
In On Global Justice, Mathias Risse claims that the earth’s original resources are collectively owne...
Many theories of global distributive justice are based on the assumption that all humans hold common...
Many theories of global distributive justice are based on the assumption that all humans hold common...
The paper contrasts Kant's conception of original common possession of the earth with Hugo Grotius's...
[full article, abstract in English; abstract in Lithuanian] During the last few years, it has bec...
That humanity collectively owns the earth was the guiding idea of 17th century political philosophy,...
Contemporary Western legal theory is posited on a claim that property rights have ‘evolved’ as a res...
At the basis of modern natural law theories, the concept of the suum, or what belongs to the person ...
The Earth and jurisprudence are both systems. The Earth is a system of physical and interlinked rela...
We use rules to decide what to do with scarce resources. Questions about rules matter insofar as we ...
This paper first recalls that the primitive phase of international law is deeply entangled with that...
Property rights are central to debates over distributive justice. In this dissertation, I defend thr...
The central argument of this thesis is that the institution of private property reflects an anthropo...
Private property ordinarily triggers notions of individual rights, not social obligations. The core ...