Natural Property Rights
Natural Property Rights presents a novel theory of property based on individual, pre-political rights. The book argues that a just system of property protects people's rights to use resources and also orders those rights consistent with natural law and the public welfare. Drawing on influential property theorists such as Grotius, Locke, Blackstone, and early American statesmen and judges, as well as recent work in in normative and analytical philosophy, the book shows how natural rights guide political and legal reasoning about property law. It examines how natural rights justify the most familiar institutions in property, including public property, ownership, the system of estates and future interests, leases, servitudes, mortgages, police regulation, and eminent domain. Thought-provoking and comprehensive, the book challenges leading contemporary justifications for property and shows how property both secures individual freedom and serves the common good.
1145307207
Natural Property Rights
Natural Property Rights presents a novel theory of property based on individual, pre-political rights. The book argues that a just system of property protects people's rights to use resources and also orders those rights consistent with natural law and the public welfare. Drawing on influential property theorists such as Grotius, Locke, Blackstone, and early American statesmen and judges, as well as recent work in in normative and analytical philosophy, the book shows how natural rights guide political and legal reasoning about property law. It examines how natural rights justify the most familiar institutions in property, including public property, ownership, the system of estates and future interests, leases, servitudes, mortgages, police regulation, and eminent domain. Thought-provoking and comprehensive, the book challenges leading contemporary justifications for property and shows how property both secures individual freedom and serves the common good.
130.0 In Stock
Natural Property Rights

Natural Property Rights

by Eric R. Claeys
Natural Property Rights

Natural Property Rights

by Eric R. Claeys

eBook

$130.00 

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Overview

Natural Property Rights presents a novel theory of property based on individual, pre-political rights. The book argues that a just system of property protects people's rights to use resources and also orders those rights consistent with natural law and the public welfare. Drawing on influential property theorists such as Grotius, Locke, Blackstone, and early American statesmen and judges, as well as recent work in in normative and analytical philosophy, the book shows how natural rights guide political and legal reasoning about property law. It examines how natural rights justify the most familiar institutions in property, including public property, ownership, the system of estates and future interests, leases, servitudes, mortgages, police regulation, and eminent domain. Thought-provoking and comprehensive, the book challenges leading contemporary justifications for property and shows how property both secures individual freedom and serves the common good.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781108956185
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 04/30/2025
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Eric R. Claeys is Professor of Law at the Antonin Scalia Law School, George Mason University. He has written more than twenty-five articles and book chapters on property, natural rights, and Lockean labor theory.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments; Table of Legislative Materials; Table of Cases; Table of Multiple Edition Works; Part I. Foundations: 1. Introduction; 2. Natural law and rights; 3. Practical reason; Part II. The Natural Right to Property: 4. Property's subject matter and interest; 5. Property's element and scope; 6. Property's conceptual structure; 7. Property, natural law, and Nozick; Part III. Property Law: 8. Justifying ownership; 9. Limiting ownership; 10. Designing property rights; 11. Subdividing ownership rights; Part IV. Property in Common Law and Public Law: 12. Common law, duties, and harms; 13. Police regulation; 14. Eminent Domain; 15. Conclusion; Index.
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