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Köp båda 2 för 808 krIn addressing the most influential theories of property to have emerged over the last four centuries, Robert Lamb captures a complex body of arguments into a concise, accessible, and yet sophisticated book. The result is an impressive and valuable achievement. Daniel Halliday, The University of Melbourne In his magisterial tour through the history of philosophical theories of property, Robert Lamb presents a perspicuous map of the territory, and a lucid account of how we can think more clearly about property rights and their implications. This book will be an invaluable resource for students and researchers in political philosophy and political theory, as well as being of interest and value to citizens thinking about politics. Martin O'Neill, University of York
Robert Lamb is Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Exeter.
Introduction: What is Property? Contesting concepts An historical approach to the concept of property Structure of the book Notes 1 The Case against Private Property Jean-Jacques Rousseau Proudhon and the anarchist case against property Socialism and the idea of life without private ownership Conclusion Notes 2 Libertarianism and the Natural Right to Property The inviolability of property rights Property and freedom The concept of self-ownership The legacy of Locke Notes 3 Natural Law and the Gnarled Roots of Self-Ownership The role of theology in natural law theories of property Back to Nozick Redistributive libertarianism Conclusion Notes 4 Property for the Greater Good: Utilitarian Theories of Ownership Utilitarianism as normative political theory Hume and the emergence of property The utilitarianisms of Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill Evaluating the utilitarian theories of property Conclusion Notes 5 Ownership as Will in the World: Hegels Account of Property Property as freedom Moments of ownership Property and poverty: the problem of the rabble Conclusion Notes 6 Property within Justice: Rawls and Beyond Rawls on the right to private property Property and distributive justice Property-owning democracy and the concept of predistribution Conclusion Notes Conclusion Bibliography Index