edited by James Penner, National University of Singapore [and] Michael Otsuka, London School of Economics.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
New York, NY, USA :
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Cambridge University Press,
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2018.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
1 online resource
INTERNAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES/INDEXES NOTE
Text of Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Cover; Half Title; Title page; Imprints page; Contents; List of Contributors; Preface; 1 The Public Nature of Private Property; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 The Corrective Justice Account; 1.3 What's Justice Got to Do with It?; 1.4 Rethinking the Distributive Justice Critiques; 1.4.1 The Distributive Foundations Critique; 1.4.2 The Distributive Aims Critique; 1.5 Rethinking Starting Points and Institutional Roles; Conclusion; 2 Legal Forms in Property Law Theory; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Forms as Regulative Ideals for Property Law; 2.3 Forms for Moralists
Text of Note
2.3.1 Conceptualism and Formalism Distinguished2.3.2 Hohfeldian Jural Relations: A Normative Account; 2.4 Conclusion; 3 What Is the Right to Exclude and Why Does It Matter?; 3.1 The Formal Structure of the Right to Exclude; 3.1.1 Three Defining Features; 3.1.2 Three Additional Clarifications; 3.2 Exclusion Stories; 3.2.1 Exclusion and Gatekeepers; 3.2.2 Exclusion and Information Costs; 3.2.3 Exclusion and Social Obligation; 3.3 The Essence of Property; 3.3.1 Exclusion Imperialism; 3.3.2 Control, Not Exclusion, as Property's Central Idea; 3.4 Conclusion; 4 Using Things, Defining Property
Text of Note
4.1 A Use-Centric Account of the Structure of Property4.2 The Analytical Argument against Use-Privileges as Defining Attributes of Property; 4.3 Protection of the Interest in Use as an Organizing Principle of Property Doctrine; 4.4 The Role of Things in the Concept of Property; 5 Is Original Acquisition Problematic?; I; A; B; C; D; II; A; B; C; D; 6 Appropriating Lockean Appropriation on Behalf of Equality; 6.1 The Lockean Proviso; 6.2 Money; 6.3 Luck Egalitarianism and the Diminished Role of Labour; 6.4 To What Extent Does a Lockean Approach Justify Equality?
Text of Note
7 Rights, Distributed and Undistributed: On the Distributive Justice Implications of Lockean Property Rights, Especially in Land7.1 Introduction; 7.2 Undistributed Powers and Rights; 7.3 Is There a Natural, i.e. Undistributed, Right to Property?; 7.4 Sreenivasan and Otsuka on Property Rights in a State of Scarcity; 7.5 Why the Ownership of Land in Unequal Shares, Such that Some May Have No Property Rights in Land, is not Necessarily Unjust; 8 Lockean Property Theory in Confucian Thought: Property in the Thought of Wang Fuzhi (1619-1692) and Huang Zongxi (1610-1695); 8.1 Introduction
Text of Note
8.2 Biographical Orientations and Context: Huang Zongxi and Wang Fuzhi8.3 Huang Zongxi's Theory of Property; 8.4 Wang Fuzhi's Theory of Property and Comparisons with Locke; 8.5 Conclusion; 9 Two Ways of Theorizing 'Collective Ownership of the Earth'; 9.1 Introduction; 9.2 Risse on Collective Ownership of the Earth; 9.3 Grotius on Original Common Ownership of the Earth; 9.4 Comparing the Two Models; 9.5 Conclusion; References; Index
0
8
8
8
8
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
The book brings together a refreshing collection of new essays on property theory, from legal, philosophical and political perspectives.