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Polyrational property: rules for the many uses of land Cover

Polyrational property: rules for the many uses of land

By: Benjamin Davy  
Open Access
|Aug 2014

Abstract

Land uses are what land users do. When spatial planners and other policymakers promote or preclude certain land uses, they interfere with the rights of the users of land, most notably with property. The technical term for what connects land uses, planning, and property is land policy. My paper has a simple message: Good land policy provides a diversity of land uses with plural property relations. No single kind of property rules fits the purposes of all types of land uses. A detached single family house is not like a community garden, nor a highway like a retail chain. Each land use needs its own property “fingerprint.” In everyday practice, private and common property relations often accommodate a wide variety of demands made by the owners and users of land. Many theories of property and land policy, however, fail to recognize plural property relations. The simple message of my paper seeks to reconcile practice and theory. A polyrational theory of planning and property identifies eight types of land uses, each type needing its own kind of property rules. The eight types of land uses are: insular, opportunistic, kinship, collaborative, corporate, structural, container, and environmental uses of land. Polyrational land policy makes sure that desirable land uses are enveloped by appropriate property relations.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.18352/ijc.455 | Journal eISSN: 1875-0281
Language: English
Published on: Aug 31, 2014
Published by: Igitur Publishing
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2014 Benjamin Davy, published by Igitur Publishing
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.