Symposium: Property: A Bundle of Rights?
In the past 15 years, the “bundle of rights” view has been provocatively challenged, notably by James E. Penner,Thomas W. Merrill, and Henry E. Smith. This symposium brings the challenge to the fore, as these leading critics elaborate the core points of contention. They are joined by three younger critics of the “bundle” view, each with a fresh perspective.
Two eminent legal scholars, Richard A. Epstein andStephen R. Munzer, take up the challenge. Each mounts his own defense of “bundle of rights” theory. Another renowned property scholar, Robert C. Ellickson, weighs in and stakes out a middle ground.
Papers:
Prologue:
Property: A Bundle of Rights?, by the symposium organizers. This short document prompted the authors. It concludes with discussion questions.
Eric R. Claeys:
Bundle-of-Sticks Notions in Legal and Economic Scholarship
Robert C. Ellickson:
Two Cheers for the Bundle-of-Sticks Metaphor, Three Cheers for Merrill and Smith
Richard A. Epstein:
Bundle-of-Rights Theory as a Bulwark Against Statist Conceptions of Private Property
Larissa Katz:
The Regulative Function of Property Rights
Thomas W. Merrill:
The Property Prism
Adam Mossoff:
The False Promise of the Right to Exclude
Stephen R. Munzer:
A Bundle Theorist Holds On to His Collection of Sticks
James E. Penner:
Potentiality, Actuality, and “Stick”-Theory
Henry E. Smith:
Property Is Not Just a Bundle of Rights
