Property is often seen as fundamentally inegalitarian, leading many to believe that a world without property would be a more equal one. Property Law in the Society of Equals challenges this view, demonstrating instead that property is essential for a society of equals. Property, as the legal
realization of the idea of yours and mine, creates the conditions for us to relate to each other on equal terms.
This conception of property allows for an examination of many of its core doctrines, including trespass and nuisance law, the law of acquisition, possession, and transfer, the
law of leases, and the law of servitudes. It also reveals the distinctive place of property within private law more generally, and how to think about novel or controversial cases of property rights. Moreover, the idea that property is fundamentally egalitarian generates a radical critique of our
present systems of property. It shows that various forms of public law regulation of property - including the right to housing and public housing itself - are justified by the same principles that underlie the need for property in the first place.
Property Law in the Society of Equals
offers a thorough and insightful account of a fundamental legal subject matter, and a compelling call for the reform of property on more egalitarian lines.
Introduction
Part I: The Theory
Chapter 1: The Problem of Yours and Mine
Chapter 2: The Law of Yours and Mine
Chapter 3: The Community of Yours and Mine
Part II: The Private Law of Property
Chapter 4: The Common Law of Property
Chapter 5: Property within
Private Law
Part III: The Public Law of Property
Chapter 6: Property and Regulation
Chapter 7: Public Property
Conclusion: What Does This Book Do?
Appendix: An Inescapable Feature of the Social World
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Christopher Essert (JD Toronto, LLM, JSD, Yale) is Associate Professor of Law and Associate Dean of the JD Program at the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto. He researches and writes primarily in the area of property law and theory and private law theory more generally.
Oxford Studies in Private Law Theory: Volume I - Edited by Paul B. Miller and John Oberdiek
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