203 sec. 001 - Property (Fall 2024)
Instructor: Jose Argueta Funes (view instructor's teaching evaluations - degree students only)
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Units: 4
Grading Designation: Graded
Mode of Instruction: In-Person
Meeting:
MW 3:35 PM - 5:25 PM
Location: Law 132
From August 19, 2024
To December 02, 2024
Course End: December 02, 2024
Class Number: 31701
Enrollment info:
Enrolled: 77
Waitlisted: 0
Enroll Limit: 81
As of: 12/03 01:03 PM
Property is a core legal and social institution: Its definition poses fundamental questions about efficiency, fairness, wealth distribution, and the tension between public and private rights. What can be owned? What does it mean to own or transfer property? How may the government permissibly regulate or take property? Though American property law has developed answers to these questions mainly in disputes over land, these questions take on new significance in the contexts of artistic and innovative creation, bodily integrity, the internet, and even space. This course examines property law and theory through the prism of these old and new resource conflicts.
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Exam Notes: (F) In-class final exam
(Subject to change by faculty member only through the first two weeks of instruction)
Exam Length: 4 hours
Course Category: Private Law and Theory
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Readers:
No reader.
Books:
Required Books are in blue
- Property Law: Rules, Policies, and Practices [Connected eBook with Study Center]
Joseph William Singer, Bethany R. Berger, Nestor M. Davidson, Eduardo Moises Penalver
Publisher: Aspen Publishing
ISBN: 9781454881797
e-Book Available: unknown
Price: To Be Determined