Description
Book SynopsisProperty and Community fills a major gap in the legal literature on property and its relationship to community. The essays included differ from past discussions, including those provided by law-and-economics, by providing richer accounts of community. By and large, prior discussions by property theorists treat communities as agglomerations of individuals and eschew substantive accounts of justice, favoring what Charles Taylor has called procedural conceptions. These perspectives on ownership obscure the possibility that the community might have a moral status that differs from neighboring owners or from non-owning individuals. This book examines a variety of social practices that implicate community in its relationship to property. These practices range from more obvious property-based communities like Israeli kibbutzim to surprising examples such as queues. Aspects of law and community in relationship to legal and social institutions both inside and outside of the United States are di
Table of ContentsIntroduction: ; Property and Community ; Gregory S. Alexander & Eduardo M. Penalver ; Chapter 1: ; The Objects of Virtue ; David Lametti ; Chapter 2: ; Re-Imagining Takings Law ; Hanoch Dagan ; Chapter 3: ; How Property Norms Construct the Externalities of Ownership ; Joseph William Singer ; Chapter 4: ; Property and Marginality ; A. J. van der Walt ; Chapter 5: ; Facts on the Ground ; Nomi Maya Stolzenberg ; Chapter 6: ; Commons and Legality ; Avital Margalit ; Chapter 7: ; The Legal Order of the Queue ; Kevin Gray