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Property Rights: Long and Skinny
Author(s) -
Richard A. Epstein
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international journal of the commons
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.654
H-Index - 26
ISSN - 1875-0281
DOI - 10.5334/ijc.993
Subject(s) - doctrine , property (philosophy) , context (archaeology) , law and economics , business , tangible property , property rights , economics , public property , law , microeconomics , political science , history , philosophy , archaeology , epistemology
This paper explores the relationship between private and common property. It starts with the state of nature, works its way through Roman law, and finishes with a discussion of the application of these principles in a modern context. It explains how the intensification of property use often leads to the need for a public trust doctrine for common pool assets, and explains why long and skinny assets have single dedicated uses, chiefly for communication and transportation which enable them to link together productive property sites used for residence, manufacture, and farming. These long and skinny assets have a large perimeter relative to area, which makes them difficult to defend on the one side, and often exposes them to multiple legal regimes with inconsistent commands. It deals with such specific issues as the distinction between alluvion and avulsion, and offers a detailed analysis of the difficulty of permitting oil and gas pipelines in the United States.1

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