Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6546920 | Land Use Policy | 2016 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Examining three possible ways of interpreting Chinaâ¿¿s laws on expropriation and eviction, I argue in this paper that a persuasive evaluative assessment of Chinaâ¿¿s property regime needs to examine the impact of forced evictions not only on property rights but also on basic rights such as the human right to be protected from forced evictions, and the problem of access to justice in cases of contentious evictions. Some (neo-liberal) arguments for secure property rights, while popular, are based on a simplistic understanding of rights, because they reduce the value of rights to their assumed utility. The â¿¿credibilityâ¿¿ thesis advanced by Peter Ho can be used to assess evictions under Chinaâ¿¿s property rights and land tenure system, but according to the view taken here, a truly credible system must protect basic rights.
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Authors
Eva Pils,