 |
|
 |
Property ownership right - Contemporary | A Wisdom Archive on Property ownership right - Contemporary |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary A selection of articles related to Property ownership right - Contemporary |  |
|
More material related to Property Ownership Right can be found here:
|
|
|  | |
Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - James Harrington 1600's, Property ownership right - John Locke 1600's, Property ownership right - Property in English philosophy, Property ownership right - Robert Filmer 1600's, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner?, Property ownership right - William Blackstone 1700's, Allemansrätten, Anarchism, Capitalism, Communism, Compulsive hoarding, Grantee and Grantor, Homestead principle, Immovable Property, Lien, Ownership society, Patrimony, Property is theft, Property law, Socialism, Sovereignty
|  | |
|
ARTICLES RELATED TO Property ownership right - Contemporary | |
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Property in English philosophyIn medieval and Renaissance Europe the term "property" essentially referred to land. Much rethinking was necessary in order for land to come to be regarded as only a special case of the property genus. This rethinking was inspired by at least three broad features of early modern Europe, the surge of commerce, the breakdown of efforts to prohibit interest (so-called "usury"), and the development of centralized national monarchies.
Several of the most influential intellectuals who responded to these three trends and rethought the whole issue of private property were English. See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in English philosophy, Property ownership right - Thomas Hobbes 1600's, Property ownership right - James Harrington 1600's, Property ownership right - Robert Filmer 1600's, Property ownership right - John Locke 1600's, Property ownership right - William Blackstone 1700's, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Property in English philosophy |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Property in philosophyIn medieval and Renaissance Europe the term "property" essentially referred to land. Much rethinking was necessary in order for land to come to be regarded as only a special case of the property genus. This rethinking was inspired by at least three broad features of early modern Europe, the surge of commerce, the breakdown of efforts to prohibit interest (so-called "usury"), and the development of centralized national monarchies.
Several of the most influential intellectuals who responded to these three trends and rethought the whole issue of private property were English.
P ...
See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in philosophy, Property ownership right - Pre-Industrial English philosophy, Property ownership right - Socialist Critique and Response, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Property in philosophy |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - What can be property?The two major justifictions of original property, or homesteading, are effort and scarcity. John Locke emphasized effort, "mixing your labor" with an object, or clearing and cultivating virgin land. Benjamin Tucker preferred to look at the telos of property, i.e. What is the purpose of property? His answer: to solve the scarcity problem. Only when items are relatively scarce with respect to people's desires do they become property.[3] For example, hunter-gatherers did not consider land to be property, since there was no shortag ...
See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in philosophy, Property ownership right - Pre-Industrial English philosophy, Property ownership right - Socialist Critique and Response, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - What can be property? |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Types of propertyMost legal systems distinguish between different types (Immovable property, Estate in land, Real estate, Real property) of property, especially between land and all other forms of property. They also often distinguish between tangible and intangible property as well.
In common law, property is divided into:
real property (immovable property) - interests in land and improvements thereto
personal pr ...
See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in philosophy, Property ownership right - Pre-Industrial English philosophy, Property ownership right - Socialist Critique and Response, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Types of property |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Theories of propertyAnthropology studies the diverse systems of ownership, rights of use and transfer, and possession under the term "theories of property". Western legal theory is based, as mentioned, on the owner of property being a legal individual. However, not all property systems are founded on this basis.
In every culture studied ownership and possession are the subject of custom and regulation, and "law" where the term can meaningfully be applied. Many tribal cultures have a "corporate" theory of ownership, meaning that ownership is by collective ...
See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in philosophy, Property ownership right - Pre-Industrial English philosophy, Property ownership right - Socialist Critique and Response, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Theories of property |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - General characteristicsModern property rights conceive of ownership and possession as belonging to legal individuals, even if the legal individual is not a real person. Thus, corporations, governments and other collective forms of ownership are framed in terms of individual ownership. Exceptions to this pattern include the "commons", which belong to a defined community, and the "public domain", to which access is unlimited.
Property rights are found in the oldest laws written down, and equate the expectation of use or profit to some payment from the very be ...
See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in philosophy, Property ownership right - Pre-Industrial English philosophy, Property ownership right - Socialist Critique and Response, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - General characteristics |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - What can be property?The two major justifictions of original property, or homesteading, are effort and scarcity. John Locke emphasized effort, "mixing your labor" with an object, or clearing and cultivating virgin land. Benjamin Tucker preferred to look at the telos of property, i.e. What is the purpose of property? His answer: to solve the scarcity problem. Only when items are relatively scarce with respect to people's desires do they become property.[1] For example, hunter-gatherers did not consider land to be property, since there was no shortag ...
See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in English philosophy, Property ownership right - Thomas Hobbes 1600's, Property ownership right - James Harrington 1600's, Property ownership right - Robert Filmer 1600's, Property ownership right - John Locke 1600's, Property ownership right - William Blackstone 1700's, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - What can be property? |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Use of the termThe concept of property or ownership has no single or universally accepted definition. Like other foundational concepts which have great weight in public discourse, popular usage varies broadly. Various scholarly communities (e.g., law, economics, anthropology, sociology) may treat the concept more systematically, but their definitions likewise vary within and between fields.
In common use, property is simply 'one's own thing' and refers to the relationship between individuals and the objects which they see as being thei ...
See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in English philosophy, Property ownership right - Thomas Hobbes 1600's, Property ownership right - James Harrington 1600's, Property ownership right - Robert Filmer 1600's, Property ownership right - John Locke 1600's, Property ownership right - William Blackstone 1700's, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Use of the term |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - General characteristicsModern property rights conceive of ownership and possession as belonging to legal individuals, even if the legal individual is not a real person. Thus, corporations, governments and other collective forms of ownership are framed in terms of individual ownership. Exceptions to this pattern include the "commons", which belong to a defined community, and the "public domain", to which access is unlimited.
Property rights are found in the oldest laws written down, and equate the expectation of use or profit to some payment from the very be ...
See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in English philosophy, Property ownership right - Thomas Hobbes 1600's, Property ownership right - James Harrington 1600's, Property ownership right - Robert Filmer 1600's, Property ownership right - John Locke 1600's, Property ownership right - William Blackstone 1700's, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - General characteristics |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Theories of propertyAnthropology studies the diverse systems of ownership, rights of use and transfer, and possession under the term "theories of property". Western legal theory is based, as mentioned, on the owner of property being a legal individual. However, not all property systems are founded on this basis.
In every culture studied ownership and possession are the subject of custom and regulation, and "law" where the term can meaningfully be applied. Many tribal cultures have a "corporate" theory of ownership, meaning that ownership is by collective ...
See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in English philosophy, Property ownership right - Thomas Hobbes 1600's, Property ownership right - James Harrington 1600's, Property ownership right - Robert Filmer 1600's, Property ownership right - John Locke 1600's, Property ownership right - William Blackstone 1700's, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Theories of property |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Types of propertyMost legal systems distinguish between different types (Immovable property, Estate in land, Real estate, Real property) of property, especially between land and all other forms of property. They also often distinguish between tangible and intangible property as well.
In common law, property is divided into:
real property (immovable property) - interests in land and improvements thereto
personal pr ...
See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in English philosophy, Property ownership right - Thomas Hobbes 1600's, Property ownership right - James Harrington 1600's, Property ownership right - Robert Filmer 1600's, Property ownership right - John Locke 1600's, Property ownership right - William Blackstone 1700's, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Types of property |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Property ownership right - Contemporary: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Use of the termThe concept of property or ownership has no single or universally accepted definition. Like other foundational concepts which have great weight in public discourse, popular usage varies broadly. Various scholarly communities (e.g., law, economics, anthropology, sociology) may treat the concept more systematically, but their definitions likewise vary within and between fields.
In common use, property is simply 'one's own thing' and refers to the relationship between individuals and the objects which they see as being thei ...
See also:Property ownership right, Property ownership right - Use of the term, Property ownership right - General characteristics, Property ownership right - Theories of property, Property ownership right - Property in philosophy, Property ownership right - Pre-Industrial English philosophy, Property ownership right - Socialist Critique and Response, Property ownership right - Contemporary, Property ownership right - Types of property, Property ownership right - What can be property?, Property ownership right - Who can be an owner? Read more here: » Property ownership right: Encyclopedia II - Property ownership right - Use of the term |
|  |
|
 | |
|
|
More material related to Property Ownership Right can be found here:
|
|
|
 | |