Parks Property Rights, and the Possibilities of the Private Law
It is commonly assumed that private property rights are incompati- ble with the preservation of such environmental and recreational amenities as our national parks and that governmental ownership is therefore required. This paper takes a different approach and ar- gues that private alternatives to public ownership of parks are legally feasible and are desirable on both efficiency and ethical grounds...
Year of publication: |
1981
|
---|---|
Authors: | James P. Beckwith, Jr. |
Published in: |
Cato Journal. - Cato Institute. - Vol. 1.1981, 2, p. 473-499
|
Publisher: |
Cato Institute |
Subject: | property rights | land | regulation | government |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
Toward a Free Market in Forest Resources
Batten, Charles R., (1981)
-
Rothbard, Murray N., (1981)
-
Pollution Externalities: Social Cost and Strict Liability
Lewin, Peter, (1982)
- More ...