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A Research Agenda for Property Law / Edited by Bram Akkermans.

Contributor(s): Series: Elgar Research AgendasPublisher: Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar Publishing, [2024]Description: viii, 277 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
ISBN:
  • 9781803924809
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 346.04072 AKK
Contents:
Contributors - 1 Introduction to A Research Agenda for Property Law - 2 Property and Empirical Comparative Legal Studies - 3 Property Theory - 4 Constitutional Property Law - 5 Property Law and Economics - 6 Resilient Property Theory - 7 Scaling Property Law - 8 A Research Agenda for Property Law Reform - 9 Papering Over Place: When Land Becomes Asset Class - 10 Property and the Energy Transition - 11 Sustainable Property Law - 12 Property and Regulation: Responding to Global Challenges - 13 Digital Goods in Property Law - 14 Digital Owners in Property Law - 15 Rethinking Property Law through Plural Sovereignties - 16 Towards a Research Agenda for Property Law - Index.
Summary: "Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary. Bringing together a diverse array of property law specialists, this timely Research Agenda explores the theoretical and doctrinal dimensions of the main subareas of property law. It examines the current tensions between the protection of existing property interests and the need to tackle societal challenges, such as digitalisation, the creation of energy communities, and the climate crisis. Multidisciplinary in scope, A Research Agenda for Property Law analyses various subfields including property theory and constitutional property law, presenting key insights into the role of property law in society. Contributing authors critically assess the internal and external challenges currently facing property law, such as the development of disruptive technologies, globalisation and the energy transition, and highlight the pressing need to accommodate them. Ultimately, it offers a way forward for future research in the coming decade to address these issues. This prescient Research Agenda is a fundamental resource for scholars and students of commercial law and property law. Its practical implications and recommendations for future research will also be beneficial to legal practitioners and policymakers at the local, national and international level"-- Provided by publisher.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Contributors -
1 Introduction to A Research Agenda for Property Law -
2 Property and Empirical Comparative Legal Studies -
3 Property Theory -
4 Constitutional Property Law -
5 Property Law and Economics -
6 Resilient Property Theory -
7 Scaling Property Law -
8 A Research Agenda for Property Law Reform -
9 Papering Over Place: When Land Becomes Asset Class -
10 Property and the Energy Transition -
11 Sustainable Property Law -
12 Property and Regulation: Responding to Global Challenges -
13 Digital Goods in Property Law -
14 Digital Owners in Property Law -
15 Rethinking Property Law through Plural Sovereignties -
16 Towards a Research Agenda for Property Law -
Index.

"Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary. Bringing together a diverse array of property law specialists, this timely Research Agenda explores the theoretical and doctrinal dimensions of the main subareas of property law. It examines the current tensions between the protection of existing property interests and the need to tackle societal challenges, such as digitalisation, the creation of energy communities, and the climate crisis. Multidisciplinary in scope, A Research Agenda for Property Law analyses various subfields including property theory and constitutional property law, presenting key insights into the role of property law in society. Contributing authors critically assess the internal and external challenges currently facing property law, such as the development of disruptive technologies, globalisation and the energy transition, and highlight the pressing need to accommodate them. Ultimately, it offers a way forward for future research in the coming decade to address these issues. This prescient Research Agenda is a fundamental resource for scholars and students of commercial law and property law. Its practical implications and recommendations for future research will also be beneficial to legal practitioners and policymakers at the local, national and international level"-- Provided by publisher.