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Full-Text Articles in Law

Graffiti Museum: A First Amendment Argument For Protecting Uncommissioned Art On Private Property, Margaret L. Mettler Nov 2012

Graffiti Museum: A First Amendment Argument For Protecting Uncommissioned Art On Private Property, Margaret L. Mettler

Michigan Law Review

Graffiti has long been a target of municipal legislation that aims to preserve property values, public safety, and aesthetic integrity in the community. Not only are graffitists at risk of criminal prosecution but property owners are subject to civil and criminal penalties for harboring graffiti on their land. Since the 1990s, most U.S. cities have promulgated graffiti abatement ordinances that require private property owners to remove graffiti from their land, often at their own expense. These ordinances define graffiti broadly to include essentially any surface marking applied without advance authorization from the property owner. Meanwhile, graffiti has risen in prominence …


Trophic Cascades And Private Property: The Challenges Of A Regulatory Balancing Act And Lessons The Uk Can Learn From The Reintroduction Of The American Gray Wolf, Whitney G. Stohr Jan 2012

Trophic Cascades And Private Property: The Challenges Of A Regulatory Balancing Act And Lessons The Uk Can Learn From The Reintroduction Of The American Gray Wolf, Whitney G. Stohr

University of Baltimore Journal of Land and Development

No abstract provided.


The Case For Imperfect Enforcement Of Property Rights, Abraham Bell, Gideon Parchomovsky Jan 2012

The Case For Imperfect Enforcement Of Property Rights, Abraham Bell, Gideon Parchomovsky

University of Pennsylvania Law Review

A persistent theme in the literature on property rights suggests that perfect state protection of private property rights would provide owners with an optimal incentive to invest in their assets. In this Essay, we challenge this view. Specifically, we argue that in many instances, perfect state protection would result in over-investment in resources. This is because perfect enforcement gives rise to a problem akin to the moral hazard problem that plagues insurance markets. In addition to pointing out this problem, we define the conditions under which it may arise in the real world and discuss the measures law should take …