Abstract: This thesis examines the nature of property rights over environmentally sensitive resources and
develops a new conception of property in these resources. It has implications for the design of property
law, environmental law, and the ethical responsibilities of business in the use of resources.
I pursue this project by examining arguments employed in the defence of the institution of private
property. These arguments are, on one hand, the ???original appropriation??? arguments of John Locke
(1632???1704) and modern versions of this, that appeal to ownership of one???s labour and, on the other
hand, arguments that appeal to utility and economic efficiency. I show how the central intuitions of
these arguments can be used to construct a theory of property in environmental resources.
I argue that property rights do not conceptually conflict with duties of preservation and that they admit of
more environmentally motivated restrictions than is often thought. They do not license uses that
contribute unjustifiably to environmental hazards or that lower environmental quality below certain
minimums. Government interventions in the form of land use planning, monitoring, and other activities
are justified in principle. The public retains a say on legal limits to property use, reflecting the interest of
the community.
The conception of property that arises is a form of private ownership with an element of stewardship. I
argue that this conception better captures the moral reasons that justify property than does a traditional
???full liberal??? conception. The account is sensitive to a plurality of justifying principles and a range of
object types and gives flexibility within a property regime. It rewards labour and productivity while
curbing the more destructive potential of unrestricted rights.
I conclude the thesis with an application to the issue of climate change. I show that this conception of
property gives the flexibility needed if necessary restraints on emissions are not to clash severely with
property rights. I develop a proposal for fairly distributing the burdens of climate change mitigation.
Publication Year: 2006
Publication Date: 2006-01-01
Language: en
Type: dissertation
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