Results 211 to 220 of about 1,860,217 (257)
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Property rights and domestication

Journal of Institutional Economics, 2019
AbstractThis paper combines the property rights approach of Barzel with models from renewable resource and evolutionary economics to examine the domestication of wild animals. Wild animals are governed by weak property rights to stocks and individuals while domesticated animals are governed by private ownership of stocks and individuals.
Gustavo Torrens, Dean Lueck
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PROPERTY AND RIGHTS

Social Philosophy and Policy, 2010
AbstractI present what I take to be the “classical” approach to property rights, in which property is basically a unitary concept: owners are the ones with the right to do, and prohibit others from doing, whatever there is to do with the thing owned, within the limits imposed by the rights of others totheirthings.
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Rights as property

2007
Rights are not fruitfully conceived as possessions. Rights are relationships, not things; they are institutionally defined rules specifying what people can do in relation to one another. Rights refer to doing more than having, to social relationships that enable or constrain action.
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Prisoners and Property Rights

The Journal of Law and Economics, 1988
THROUGHOUT history, defeated enemies have been treated in strikingly distinct ways. Many instances are known in which they were treated with utmost brutality and massacred in large numbers. In his history of the crusades, Runciman' tells us that when the Persians conquered Jerusalem in the year 614, 60,000 Christians were murdered regardless of sex or ...
Frey, Bruno S., Buhofer, Heinz
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The Race for Property Rights

The Journal of Law and Economics, 1990
ECONOMICS literature on the evolution of property rights has increasingly emphasized the optimal timing for establishing those rights. Yoram Barzel,' Dale Mortensen,2 and Partha Dasgupta and Joseph Stiglitz,3 for example, have shown that competition among firms for the rents associated with innovative devices and ideas can lead to the dissipation of ...
Anderson, Terry, Hill, Peter J.
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common property rights

1987
In a society where individuals compete for the use of scarce resources, some rules or criteria of competition must exist to resolve the conflict. These rules, known as property rights, may be established in law, in regulation, in custom or in hierarchy ranking.
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Rights in Property

1976
In legal terminology the word ‘property’ has more than one meaning. Usually when one speaks of property, however, what is meant is things that are capable of being owned. But it is important to remember that things can be owned even though they do not exist in any tangible form, and because of this there is a legal distinction between things which have
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On property rights

1992
The conceptual dimensions of property and property rights have many practical implications for resource allocation. Economic analyses as a rule take property rights for granted. Certainly, as far as the relevance of the theory of ownership to efficient resource allocation is concerned, there is much less of a consistent, self-contained, and ...
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Property and Succession Rights

1988
In the law of property, discrimination is most likely to affect the capacity to hold property, the capacity to acquire it or the capacity to dispose of it. The law of succession is relevant both to acquisition and disposal and may contain discriminatory rules to the advantage or disadvantage of the male or the female.
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Artificial channels for confined mass transport at the sub-nanometre scale

Nature Reviews Materials, 2021
Jie Shen, Gong-Ping Liu, Yu Han
exaly  

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