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Property Law: Comparative, Empirical, and Economic Analyses


ISBN13: 9781009236591
Published: June 2023
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: USA
Format: Hardback
Price: £105.00



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>p>The first book of its kind, Property Law: Comparative, Empirical, and Economic Analyses, uses a unique hand-coded data set on nearly 300 dimensions on the substance of property law in 156 jurisdictions to describe the convergence and divergence of key property doctrines around the world. This book quantitatively analyzes property institutions and uses machine learning methods to categorize jurisdictions into ten legal families, challenging the existing paradigms in economics and law. Using other cross-country data, the author empirically tests theories about property law and comparative law. Using economic efficiency as both a positive and a normative criterion, each chapter evaluates which jurisdictions have the most efficient property doctrines, concluding that the common law is not more efficient than the civil law. Unlike prior studies on empirical comparative law, this book provides detailed citations to laws in each jurisdiction. Data and documentation are publicly available on the author's website.

Subjects:
Property Law
Contents:
Introduction

Part I. Foundation:
1. Property Law around the World: An Empirical Overview
2. Economic Framework
3. Limited Number of Limited Property Rights: Less is More
4. Transfer of Ownership: Transaction Cost v. Information Cost

Part II. Immovable Property:
5. Acquisitive Prescription: Hardly Justified in Modern, Developed Countries
6. Building Encroachment: In Search of an Efficiency Justification
7. Co-ownership Partition: Proposing a New Auction-based Design
8. Managing Co-ownership: Tragedy of the Common-Ownership? 9. Access to Landlocked Land: Hybrid Entitlement Protection

Part III. Movable Property:
10. Good-faith Purchaser: Proposing Fractional Ownership and Internal Auction
11. Finders, Keepers: A Minority Rule
12. The Specificatio Doctrine: Do What the Romans Did
13. The Accessio Doctrine: No Sign of Convergence