Difference between revisions of "What Is Property?"
From Critiques Of Libertarianism
Line 96: | Line 96: | ||
Full liberal rights would consist of all these elements. | Full liberal rights would consist of all these elements. | ||
− | The [[bundle of rights]] theory is commonly used in first-year law school property | + | The [[wikipedia:bundle of rights]] theory is commonly used in first-year law school property |
classes to explain how a property can simultaneously be "owned" in some sense | classes to explain how a property can simultaneously be "owned" in some sense | ||
by multiple parties. For example, a husband and wife can be owners (technically, | by multiple parties. For example, a husband and wife can be owners (technically, | ||
Line 105: | Line 105: | ||
always holds the right to condemnation, also called eminent domain, and the | always holds the right to condemnation, also called eminent domain, and the | ||
government at multiple levels retains various regulatory rights such as | government at multiple levels retains various regulatory rights such as | ||
− | environmental regulation, zoning, and building codes. ([[bundle of rights|From Wikipedia.]]) | + | environmental regulation, zoning, and building codes. ([[wikipedia:bundle of rights|From Wikipedia.]]) |
==Are there different rights for public property?== | ==Are there different rights for public property?== |