The latest Part of the Property Law Review includes the following content: “Asset Protection and NSW Stamp Duty: A Symbiosis” – Rebecca Barbou; “Overriding Statutes and Torrens – Developing a Response to Torrens’s ‘Greatest Legal Enemy'” – Lynden Griggs; “Improving Housing Security through Tenancy Law Reform: Alternatives to Long Fixed Term Agreements” – Chris Martin; “Public Nuisance Claims in Climate Change Litigation: How Useful Are They?” – Jana Norman; “Sharing Property: Multi-owned Property Workshop – Sarah Blandy, Clare Mouat and Cathy Sherry; Queensland: “The Human Body and Private Property: Sperm Harvesting” – Sharon Christensen; New Zealand: “The Land Transfer Act 2017 – Part 1” – Thomas Gibbons; and United States: “Joint Bank Account Held by Husband and Wife – Presumption of Tenancy by the Entirety – Severance on Withdrawal by One” – John Orth. This issue also includes the following section: Editorial; and Book Reviews.
Posted in Journals, Property Law Review (Prop L Rev), Update Summaries | Tagged asset protection and NSW stamp duty, Book reviews, Cathy Sherry, Chris Martin, City of New York v BP plc, City of Oakland v BP, Clare Mouat, David Brown, Editorial, improving housing security, Jana Norman, John Orth, joint bank account held by husband and wife, Law of Personal Property, Lynden Griggs, multi-owned property workshop, New Zealand, overriding legislation and the Torrens system, Paul Babie, Peter Burdon, presumption of tenancy, Prop L Rev, public nuisance claims in climate change litigation, Queensland, Rebecca Barbour, Sarah Blandy, severance on withdrawal, Sharon Christensen, sperm harvesting, Sunburnt Country, tenancy law reform, The Land Transfer Act 2017 Part 1, Thomas Gibbons, United States |
The latest part of the Property Law Review (Volume 3 Part 3) is a Special Issue that explores many different ways of thinking about law and property, and is available for purchase as a standalone part in print or PDF. In this 144pp bumper issue, Guest Editors Professor Sarah Blandy (School of Law, University of Sheffield) and Professor ...more
Posted in News & Insight, Property Law Review (Prop L Rev) | Tagged anthropology, Bram Akkermans, Brenna Bhandar, common property, comparative method, Daniel H Cole, doctrinal scholarship, economic function, empirical approach, feminist, Helen Carr, indigenous rights, Kali Murray, Laura S Underkuffler, Lisa Whitehouse, Martin Dixon, Nicholas Blomley, private property, progressive property, Prop L Rev, property law, Property Law Review (Prop L Rev), public property, research methods, Robin Paul Malloy, Sarah Blandy, Simon Young, Simone Wong, socio-cultural history, socio-legal approach, spatial dimensions, Special Issue, Susan Bright |
The latest Part of Prop L Rev is a special issue on research methods in property law and includes the following articles: “A theoretical approach: The lens of progressive property” – Laura S Underkuffler; “A doctrinal approach to property law scholarship: Who cares and why?” – Martin Dixon; “Socio-legal approaches to property law research” – Sarah Blandy; “The empirical approach to research in property law” – Lisa Whitehouse and Susan Bright; “Critical legal studies and the politics of property” – Brenna Bhandar; “Serendipity and care: Cultural and social history in property law” – Kali Murray; “The comparative method in property law” – Bram Akkermans; “The law and economics approach to property” – Daniel H Cole; “Applied property research: A transactional approach” – Robin Paul Malloy; “Property, law and space” – Nicholas Blomley; “Law and anthropology: The unhappy marriage?” – Simon Young; and “Feminist approaches to property law research” – Helen Carr and Simone Wong.
Posted in Property Law Review (Prop L Rev), Update Summaries | Tagged anthropology, Bram Akkermans, Brenna Bhandar, common property, comparative method, Daniel H Cole, doctrinal scholarship, economic function, empirical approach, feminist, Helen Carr, indigenous rights, Kali Murray, Laura S Underkuffler, Lisa Whitehouse, Martin Dixon, Nicholas Blomley, private property, progressive property, Prop L Rev, property law, public property, research methods, Robin Paul Malloy, Sarah Blandy, Simon Young, Simone Wong, socio-cultural history, socio-legal approach, spatial dimensions, Susan Bright |