ACTIVITIES | PercentageS |
---|---|
A Term Paper (or Research) Proposal | 50% |
Presentation | 20% |
Participation | 30% |
When you click the Amazon logo to the left of any citation and purchase the book (or other media) from Amazon.com, MIT OpenCourseWare will receive up to 10% of this purchase and any other purchases you make during that visit. This will not increase the cost of your purchase. Links provided are to the US Amazon site, but you can also support OCW through Amazon sites in other regions. Learn more. |
The property rights revolution spreads across the globe as more things convert into private ownership. In fact, property rights have been dramatically transformed and reformed throughout the centuries because they are central to struggles around wealth, power, and social values. Now, more than ever, policymakers are faced with the challenge to understand the relationship between changing property relations and economic and political development.
How do things come to be owned? How do we as a society decide what can be owned, who can be owners, and what boundaries their rights have? Why and how do property rights regimes change? What will be the impact of new property rights? This graduate seminar explores these issues through economic, institutional, and legal perspectives. We will discuss these alternative frameworks with empirical cases about land, real estate, and natural resources from the United States, developing, and transition countries.
This seminar is intended to be an upper-level seminar for students from a variety of disciplinary backgrounds. Students will be given the opportunity to engage with each other over the reading material and cases so advance preparation is essential. Students will pursue a research paper on a topic of their own choosing under the guidance of the professor and will present it at the end of the course to the seminar.
Students should purchase the course text:
Ellickson, Robert C., Carol M. Rose, and Bruce A. Ackerman, eds. Perspectives on Property Law. 3rd ed. New York, NY: Aspen Publishers, 2002. ISBN: 9780735528741.
MIT 11.493 or by permission of the instructor.
Students who take the seminar for credit must fulfill the following:
ACTIVITIES | PercentageS |
---|---|
A Term Paper (or Research) Proposal | 50% |
Presentation | 20% |
Participation | 30% |