Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Law
"Economic Property Rights" As "Nonsense Upon Stilts": A Comment On Hodgson, Daniel H. Cole
"Economic Property Rights" As "Nonsense Upon Stilts": A Comment On Hodgson, Daniel H. Cole
Articles by Maurer Faculty
Hodgson's (2015) critique of extra-legal 'property rights' - in this case, so-called 'economic property rights' - is right on target. This Comment contributes two further points to his critique. First, the notion of 'economic property rights' is based on what Gilbert Ryle (1949) referred to as a 'category mistake', conflating physical possession, which is a brute fact about the world, with the right or entitlement to possession, which is a social or institutional fact that cannot exist in the absence of some social contract, convention, covenant, or agreement. The very notion of a non-institutional 'right' is oxymoronic. Second, the fact …
Takings And The Right To Fish And Float In Colorado, Aaron Pettis
Takings And The Right To Fish And Float In Colorado, Aaron Pettis
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Original Acquisition Of Property: From Conquest & Possession To Democracy & Equal Opportunity, Joseph William Singer
Original Acquisition Of Property: From Conquest & Possession To Democracy & Equal Opportunity, Joseph William Singer
Indiana Law Journal
2010 Harris Lecture, delivered April 5, 2010, Indiana University, Maurer School of Law, Bloomington, Indiana
Virtual Property, Joshua Fairfield
Virtual Property, Joshua Fairfield
Articles by Maurer Faculty
This article explores three new concepts in property law. First, the article defines an emerging property form - virtual property - that is not intellectual property, but that more efficiently governs rivalrous, persistent, and interconnected online resources. Second, the article demonstrates that the threat to high-value uses of internet resources is not the traditional tragedy of the commons that results in overuse. Rather, the naturally layered nature of the internet leads to overlapping rights of exclusion that cause underuse of internet resources: a tragedy of the anticommons. And finally, the article shows that the common law of property can act …
Clearing The Air: Four Propositions About Property Rights And Environmental Protection, Daniel H. Cole
Clearing The Air: Four Propositions About Property Rights And Environmental Protection, Daniel H. Cole
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.