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Articles 1 - 30 of 56
Full-Text Articles in Law
Objects Of Art; Objects Of Property, Gregory S. Alexander
Objects Of Art; Objects Of Property, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.
Interpreting Legal Constructivism, Gregory S. Alexander
Interpreting Legal Constructivism, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.
Intergenerational Communities, Gregory S. Alexander
Intergenerational Communities, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
Under the human flourishing theory of property, owners have obligations, positive as well as negative, that they owe to members of the various communities to which they belong. But are the members of those communities limited to living persons, or do they include non-living persons as well, i.e., future persons and the dead? This Article argues that owners owe two sorts of obligation to non-living members of our generational communities, one general, the other specific. The general obligation is to provide future generations with the basic material background conditions that are necessary for them to be able to carry out …
History As Ideology In The Basic Property Course, Gregory S. Alexander
History As Ideology In The Basic Property Course, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
Why has history played such a prominent role in the basic property course in the twentieth century? Such a loaded question requires some explanation. Legal history is doubtless used in all the first-year common-law courses, but I have the impression that since Langdell's time it has been more conspicuous in property than in the other basic courses. At least let us provisionally accept this rather dogmatic assertion in order to examine the more interesting questions: what function has the historical perspective served in property, and what other function might history serve in the course?
The Ambiguous Work Of "Natural Property Rights", Gregory S. Alexander
The Ambiguous Work Of "Natural Property Rights", Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.
Pensions And Passivity, Gregory S. Alexander
Pensions And Passivity, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
This article discusses how modem fiduciary law has extended equity's tradition of constructing ownership as passive through the corporate pension system. It examines how the corporate pension system as a mode of owning pooled capital is a new stage of passive ownership. This stage creates a different aspect of the familiar problem of separating control from beneficial ownership. Berle and Means argued that the problem that the separation of control from ownership created was economic. The interests of managers and shareholders in the modern corporation diverge, and, they argued, this divergence diminishes the overall efficiency of the modern economy, dominated …
Michelman As Doctrinalist, Gregory S. Alexander
Michelman As Doctrinalist, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
Presented at the 2004 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference.
Dilemmas Of Group Autonomy: Residential Associations And Community, Gregory S. Alexander
Dilemmas Of Group Autonomy: Residential Associations And Community, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
We are a society of groups. De Tocqueville's observation that the principle of association shapes American society remains as valid today as it was in the mid-nineteenth century. For us, as for others, the vita activa is participation in a seemingly limitless variety of groups. The importance of group activity in our national character has strongly influenced the agenda of political questions that recur in American political and legal theory. One of the fundamental normative questions on this agenda concerns the proper relationship between groups and the polity. To what extent should the polity foster connections between associations and the …
The Limits Of Property Reparations, Gregory S. Alexander
The Limits Of Property Reparations, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
Human history is replete with examples of unjustified expropriations of property by conquering states and other transitory regimes. Only in modern times, however, have nations attempted systematically to remedy historical injustices by providing reparations to the dispossessed owners or their successors. From the aboriginal peoples of the Antipodes to the Native Americans of Canada and the U.S. to the European victims of the German and Soviet communism, groups of people who were stripped of their land and possessions by fraud or force are demanding, and in many cases getting, reparations for these injustices. The thesis of this paper is that …
Ownership And Obligations: The Human Flourishing Theory Of Property, Gregory Alexander
Ownership And Obligations: The Human Flourishing Theory Of Property, Gregory Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
Private property ordinarily triggers notions of individual rights, not social obligations. The core image of property rights, in the minds of most people, is that the owner has a right to exclude others and owes no further obligation to them. That image is highly misleading. Property owners owe far more responsibilities to others, both owners and non-owners, than the conventional imagery of property rights suggests. Property rights are inherently relational, and because of this characteristic, owners necessarily owe obligations to others. But the responsibility, or obligation, dimension of private ownership has been sorely under-theorised. Inherent in the concept of ownership …
Eminent Domain And Secondary Rent-Seeking, Gregory S. Alexander
Eminent Domain And Secondary Rent-Seeking, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.
Takings, Narratives, And Power, Gregory S. Alexander
Takings, Narratives, And Power, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
"The Regulatory Takings Problem" is the title given to a story, or narrative, that has become prominent in the literature on just compensation issues. The story is one of power and fear. It is about a perceived imbalance of power between the two groups of actors involved in the process of public land-use regulation--private landowners and government regulators. It depicts scenarios of past or threatened abuse of power by local land-use regulators, and it looks to the takings clause generally and regulatory takings doctrine specifically as crucial corrective devices, essential to set the power imbalance aright. The dominant narrative describes …
Property As A Fundamental Constitutional Right? The German Example, Gregory Alexander
Property As A Fundamental Constitutional Right? The German Example, Gregory Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.
Ademption And The Domain Of Formality In Wills Law, Gregory S. Alexander
Ademption And The Domain Of Formality In Wills Law, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
The 1990 revision of the Uniform Probate Code ("UPC") marks the second stage of probate reform in the second half of this century. The first stage was the adoption of the original UPC. While it included some changes in the substantive law of wills, its primary objective was to simplify probate procedure. The second stage, by contrast, focuses almost entirely on the substantive law of wills and will substitutes. It changes several of the primary rules of wills law, including the traditional rule requiring strict compliance with execution formalities. It also makes significant changes in the subsidiary rules of wills …
The Transformation Of Trusts As A Legal Category, 1800-1914, Gregory Alexander
The Transformation Of Trusts As A Legal Category, 1800-1914, Gregory Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
Sometimes we are least aware of that which most affects us. So it seems with respect to legal categories. Lawyers do not take legal categories very seriously today. But they should. Legal categories are central to legal reasoning; indeed it is almost impossible to imagine legal reasoning without the use of categories. Categorical thinking affects every area of law. The purpose of this article is to illuminate, through a case-study, the contingent and ideological character of legal categories. It focuses on the development of trusts into and then as a discrete legal category during the period between the beginning of …
The Social-Obligation Norm In American Property Law, Gregory Alexander
The Social-Obligation Norm In American Property Law, Gregory Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.
Forty Years Of Codification Of Estates And Trusts Law: Lessons For The Next Generation, Gregory S. Alexander, Mary L. Fellows
Forty Years Of Codification Of Estates And Trusts Law: Lessons For The Next Generation, Gregory S. Alexander, Mary L. Fellows
Gregory S Alexander
In this paper we develop two theses. First, we argue that uniform law proposals that ask courts and practitioners to abandon revered legal traditions and ways of thinking about estates and trusts, even when they are intent-furthering proposals, face resistance until in time the glories of the past and the risks of a new legal regime fade in importance in legal thought. Second, we argue that, especially within an environment in which states seek to gain competitive advantage over their counterparts in other states, the glories of the past and the risks of a new legal regime fade fastest when …
Playing With Fire, Gregory S. Alexander
Properties Of Community, Gregory Alexander, Eduardo Peñalver
Properties Of Community, Gregory Alexander, Eduardo Peñalver
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.
Innovating Property, Reviewing Stuart Banner, American Property: A History Of How, Why, And What We Own, Gregory Alexander
Innovating Property, Reviewing Stuart Banner, American Property: A History Of How, Why, And What We Own, Gregory Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.
A Statement Of Progressive Property, Gregory S. Alexander, Eduardo M. Peñalver, Joseph W. Singer, Laura S. Underkuffler
A Statement Of Progressive Property, Gregory S. Alexander, Eduardo M. Peñalver, Joseph W. Singer, Laura S. Underkuffler
Gregory S Alexander
What would a progressive theory of property look like? Although such a theory might take root within any number of specific normative frameworks, this Statement of Progressive Property outlines several features progressive theories of property should have in common. The Statement argues that we should understand property as both an idea and an institution, that property confers power and shapes community, both in its legal and social dimensions, and that property should be understood as serving plural and incommensurable values whose accommodation is possible through reasoned deliberation and practical judgment.
Alternative Models Of Ante-Mortem Probate And Procedural Due Process Limitations On Succession, Gregory S. Alexander, Albert M. Pearson
Alternative Models Of Ante-Mortem Probate And Procedural Due Process Limitations On Succession, Gregory S. Alexander, Albert M. Pearson
Gregory S Alexander
Ante-mortem probate stands as a significant recent development in the American law of wealth succession. It confronts a problem that seriously impairs our probate system, the depredatious will contest, and promises to help revitalize the probate process. Already enacted in several states and currently under active study by the Joint Editorial Board of the Uniform Probate Code and the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, ante-mortem probate is likely to be widely implemented in some form. But while legislators and academics alike support ante-mortem probate as a general idea, disagreement has emerged over the specific form it should …
The Complex Core Of Property, Gregory Alexander
The Complex Core Of Property, Gregory Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.
Time And Property In The American Republican Legal Culture, Gregory S. Alexander
Time And Property In The American Republican Legal Culture, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
Modern historians including J.G.A. Pocock and Gordon Wood have demonstrated the degree to which revolutionary American political discourse incorporated "civic republican" notions of virtue, property, and citizenship that promoted stable land ownership and active political participation. These historians also have argued that the republican view soon gave way to the now-dominant liberal view that champions the alienability of property and private over public life. Professor Alexander argues that this history is too neat. In fact, American republicanism contained unreconciled "dialectical" tensions—between individual rights and societal goals, stability of ownership and wealth redistribution, historical continuity and change—that, though now expressed in …
Ten Years Of Takings, Gregory Alexander
Ten Years Of Takings, Gregory Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No area of property law has been more controversial in the past decade than takings. No aspect of constitutional law more sharply poses the dilemma about the legitimate powers of the regulatory state than the just compensation question. No question concerning constitutional property is more intractable than what sorts of government regulatory actions constitute uncompensated "takings" of private property. Limitations of space, not to mention my own ambivalence about many of the issues, prevent me from developing a complete normative theory of the proper scope of the Takings Clause. My aim here is vastly more modest: to outline the basic …
"Takings" Jurisprudence In The U.S. Supreme Court: The Past 10 Years, Gregory S. Alexander
"Takings" Jurisprudence In The U.S. Supreme Court: The Past 10 Years, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No area of American property law has been more controversial in recent years than the government regulation of uses of private property. No aspect of American constitutional law more sharply poses the dilemma about the legitimate powers of the regulatory state than the requirement that the government pay compensation for takings of property. The purpose of this essay is to acquaint the non-American legal scholar who is unfamiliar with the recent developments in the United States Supreme Court “takings” jurisprudence. The essay does not presuppose any background knowledge about either American constitutional or property law. Instead it attempts to familiarize …
Dilemmas Of Group Autonomy: Residential Associations And Community , Gregory S. Alexander
Dilemmas Of Group Autonomy: Residential Associations And Community , Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.
Commentary On Presentations Of Prof. Roberta S. Karmel & Prof. James A. Fanto, Gregory S. Alexander
Commentary On Presentations Of Prof. Roberta S. Karmel & Prof. James A. Fanto, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.
Commentaries: The Ambiguous Work Of “Natural Property Rights”, Gregory S. Alexander
Commentaries: The Ambiguous Work Of “Natural Property Rights”, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
The three fascinating papers by Dick Helmholz, Jim Ely, and Mark Tushnet prompt me to ask, why was there so much talk among late 18th and 19th century American lawyers about property as a "natural" right and why has the language persisted today? More specifically, what work is the rhetoric of "natural property rights" intended to do? This is not the proper occasion for developing anything like complete answers to those questions, but I do want to offer three lines of thought that might begin to approach a fuller explanation of the puzzling persistence of natural-property-rights talk.
Demythologizing Property And The Illusion Of Rules: A Response To Two Friendly Critics, Gregory S. Alexander
Demythologizing Property And The Illusion Of Rules: A Response To Two Friendly Critics, Gregory S. Alexander
Gregory S Alexander
No abstract provided.