| Table of Cases |
|
xxi | |
| Table of Statutes |
|
xxxv | |
| Regnal Years |
|
xxxvii | |
| Abbreviations |
|
xxxix | |
| Introduction |
|
1 | (7) |
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The Significance of Riparian Doctrine |
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1 | (2) |
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The Economic Consequences of the Law |
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3 | (3) |
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Doctrinal and Empirical Case-studies |
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|
6 | (2) |
| 1. The Exploitation of Water in Historical Perspective |
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8 | (38) |
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8 | (1) |
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Water Use in the Ancient World-The 'Hydraulic Society' Hypothesis |
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9 | (3) |
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Water for Power in the Ancient World |
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12 | (4) |
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A Technically Simple Society? |
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12 | (3) |
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Culturalist Explanations of Technological Stagnation |
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15 | (1) |
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Medieval Water Use and Power Technology |
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16 | (6) |
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Feudal Milling Monopolies |
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19 | (2) |
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Early Legislative Control of Water Use |
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21 | (1) |
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The Modern Age of Water Power |
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22 | (9) |
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The Arkwrights and the New Industrialism |
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25 | (2) |
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The Genesis of the Factory: Water Power and Monopoly |
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27 | (4) |
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Water Supply, Water Rights, and Industrial Location |
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31 | (6) |
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Other Uses of Water in the Industrial Age |
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37 | (2) |
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Legal Conflict over Water Rights |
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39 | (4) |
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The Doctrinal History of Water Rights |
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43 | (3) |
| 2. Servitude Doctrine in Early Law |
|
46 | (71) |
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46 | (19) |
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Actions for Rights and Wrongs |
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47 | (2) |
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Romanism in Early English Property Actions |
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49 | (3) |
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Nuisance, Water Rights, and the Forms of Action |
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52 | (3) |
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Disseisin and Nuisance Forms of Action |
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55 | (1) |
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The Form of Action for Defence of Servitudes and User |
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56 | (2) |
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Bracton's Exposition of the Assize of Nuisance |
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58 | (3) |
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The Real Form of the Nuisance Action |
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58 | (1) |
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The Doctrine of Appurtenance |
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59 | (1) |
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Real and Personal Remedies |
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60 | (1) |
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61 | (1) |
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Bracton's Analysis of Injuria and Damnum |
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61 | (2) |
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The Forms of Action after Bracton |
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63 | (1) |
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64 | (1) |
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Bracton, Roman Law, and the Substantive Nature of Water Rights |
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65 | (11) |
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Ownership and Incorporeal Rights: Some Institutionalist Distinctions |
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65 | (2) |
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Common Ownership Contrasted with Res Communes Ideas |
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67 | (2) |
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Natural Water Rights as 'Servitudes Imposed by Law' |
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69 | (1) |
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Servitudes as Praedial Rights over Another's Property |
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70 | (1) |
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The Distinction Between Servitudes and Natural Rights, and the Unity of Remedy |
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70 | (2) |
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72 | (3) |
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Servitudes as Proprietary Land-use Rights |
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72 | (1) |
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72 | (2) |
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Servitudes Asserted by in Rem Actions |
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74 | (1) |
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74 | (1) |
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Bracton's Adoption of Specific Roman Water Doctrines |
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75 | (1) |
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The Natural Source Doctrine |
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76 | (1) |
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Standards of Reasonableness in the Exercise of Rights |
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76 | (21) |
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Reasonable Extensions of Right |
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76 | (1) |
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Reasonable Restraints of Right |
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77 | (2) |
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Constitution of Rights of Grant by Livery and Use |
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79 | (2) |
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Rules for the Constitution of Incorporeal Rights |
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81 | (3) |
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84 | (2) |
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Roman Prescription Precedents |
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84 | (1) |
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85 | (1) |
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86 | (1) |
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Bracton's Doctrine of Prescription for Servitudes |
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86 | (2) |
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Modern Analysis of Bractonian Prescription |
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88 | (9) |
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88 | (4) |
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92 | (5) |
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The Later Medieval Law: From Bracton to Coke |
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97 | (20) |
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The Exclusion of Romanism from Legal Reasoning |
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97 | (3) |
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The Rise of the Action on the Case for Nuisance |
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100 | (1) |
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Trespass to Land and Trespass on the Case for Nuisance |
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101 | (6) |
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Public or Common Nuisance and the Action on the Case |
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107 | (2) |
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Water as Public Property Defended by Mixed Nuisance Actions |
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109 | (2) |
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Dominance of Action on the Case for Nuisance |
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111 | (2) |
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The Nature of Water Incidents-A Confusion of Theories |
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113 | (1) |
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114 | (3) |
| 3. The Common Law of Riparian Rights 1580-1750 |
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117 | (36) |
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117 | (5) |
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The Use of the Maxim Sic Utere Tuo ut Alienum non Laedas to Explain Natural Rights |
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122 | (5) |
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Protection of Immemorial Flow |
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127 | (2) |
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The Triumph of Natural-Right Analysis |
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129 | (11) |
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Pleading and Substance in the Late Seventeenth Century |
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140 | (6) |
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The Nature of the Interest |
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140 | (2) |
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140 | (1) |
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141 | (1) |
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The Extent of Protection-Damage or Title? |
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142 | (4) |
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The Theory of Injuria Sine Damno |
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146 | (2) |
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Direct and Indirect Causation: New Conceptualizations of Trespass and Case |
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148 | (5) |
| 4. Blackstone's and Hale's Doctrines of Land and Water Use |
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153 | (40) |
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Institutionalists and the Development of the Modern Law |
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153 | (1) |
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The Theory of Water Rights in Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England |
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154 | (1) |
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Natural Law, Positivism, and Property Theory |
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155 | (3) |
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The Relationship of Common Law and Custom |
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156 | (1) |
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Custom and Time Immemorial |
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157 | (1) |
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Absolute and Relative Property and Social Contract Theory |
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158 | (2) |
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Property as an Absolute Personal Right or Natural Right |
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159 | (1) |
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The Natural Basis of Property Titles in Use and Occupation |
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160 | (3) |
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The Distinction between Use and Title |
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160 | (1) |
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Occupation as the Natural Source of Title |
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160 | (3) |
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Explaining the Creation and Vesting of Titles |
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163 | (1) |
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The Taxonomy of Title Rights |
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164 | (1) |
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Incorporeal Hereditaments |
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165 | (4) |
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Definition of Incorporeal Property |
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166 | (1) |
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The Nature of Incorporeal Rights-Advowsons |
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166 | (1) |
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167 | (2) |
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169 | (1) |
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Prior Appropriation, Competition, and Monopoly The Case of Franchises |
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169 | (3) |
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'Transient' Property and Title by Prior Appropriation-The Case of Water |
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172 | (5) |
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Water as Personal Property with Real Qualities |
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174 | (1) |
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Water as 'Qualified Property' |
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175 | (2) |
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177 | (3) |
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'Concerning the Interest of Fresh Rivers'-Ownership of Soil of Streams |
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178 | (1) |
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'Of the Right of Prerogative in Private of Fresh Rivers'-Royal Franchises and Supervision |
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179 | (1) |
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'Concerning Publick Streams'-Public Law Rights in Rivers as Highways |
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179 | (1) |
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The Doctrine of Dedication of Private Goods to Public Use |
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180 | (1) |
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Blackstone's Analysis of Remedial Law |
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180 | (13) |
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Tort Remedies for Possession and Property |
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181 | (1) |
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The Complexity of Remedy-based Common Law |
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181 | (1) |
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Romanizing the Forms of Action |
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182 | (1) |
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Injuries to Real Rights: Disseisin |
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182 | (1) |
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Injuries to Property Enjoyment: Trespass |
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183 | (1) |
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Injuries to Property Enjoyment: Nuisance |
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184 | (10) |
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Nuisance to Corporeal Hereditaments |
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185 | (3) |
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Protection of Incorporeal Rights of Grant from Nuisance |
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188 | (1) |
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The Forms of Action for Nuisance |
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189 | (2) |
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Self-help to Abate the Nuisance |
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191 | (2) |
| 5. Appropriation Theory in the Courts |
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193 | (75) |
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Natural Right and Prescription Ideas in the Courts at the Time of Blackstone |
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193 | (1) |
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The Modern Doctrine of Prescription and Presumed Grant |
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194 | (7) |
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Prescription for Incorporeal Property and 1189 |
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194 | (1) |
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Reasonableness and Necessity in Presumptions of Grant |
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195 | (1) |
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Reasonableness and the Status of the Presumed Grant |
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196 | (1) |
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The Fiction of the Lost Modern Grant |
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197 | (4) |
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The Policy of Prescription Doctrine |
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201 | (1) |
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201 | (3) |
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Blackstonian Prior Appropriation Theory in the Courts |
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204 | (18) |
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Kames' Riposte Romanist Natural Rights |
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204 | (3) |
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English Appropriation Doctrine c.1800 |
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207 | (1) |
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Bealey v. Shaw and the Adoption of Prior Appropriation Theory |
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207 | (6) |
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Applications of the Blackstonian Doctrine |
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213 | (4) |
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217 | (3) |
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Blackstonian Appropriation Theory Revived in the Court of King's Bench |
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220 | (2) |
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The Generalization of Appropriation Theory |
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222 | (4) |
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Reform of the Prior Appropriation Theory-Mason v. Hill |
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226 | (6) |
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Rights in Artificial Watercourses |
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232 | (27) |
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232 | (6) |
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238 | (3) |
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241 | (2) |
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Artificial Conduits and Artificially Obtained Water |
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243 | (2) |
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Local Custom and Rights in Artificial Channels |
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245 | (7) |
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Non-riparian Statutory Rights to Water: The Canal and Utility Cases |
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252 | (6) |
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Refining the Factual Presumption of Prescriptive Title |
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258 | (1) |
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Liability for Escapes and Sic Utere Tuo before the Rule of Rylands v. Fletcher |
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259 | (9) |
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Fault Liability for Flooding |
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260 | (1) |
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Subterranean Watercourses and the Plenitude of Ownership |
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261 | (7) |
| 6. The Establishment of the Modern Riparian Doctrine |
|
268 | (60) |
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The Influence of Civilian and American Riparian Doctrine in the Nineteenth Century |
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268 | (14) |
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Roman Doctrine and the Rise of Treatise Literature |
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268 | (2) |
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Romanism in the Modern Courts |
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270 | (1) |
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American Civilianism and Riparian Law |
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271 | (3) |
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Tyler v. Wilkinson and the Story Doctrine |
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274 | (2) |
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A Closer Look at Sic Utere Tuo |
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276 | (3) |
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279 | (3) |
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The Role of Gale's Law of Easements |
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282 | (1) |
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282 | (14) |
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Embrey v. Owen: The Arguments |
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283 | (4) |
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Embrey v. Owen: The Decision |
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287 | (3) |
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Acceptance and Elaboration of the Embrey Doctrine |
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290 | (2) |
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Affirmation by the House of Lords: Miner v. Gilmour |
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292 | (2) |
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The Embrey Test and Jury Directions |
|
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294 | (2) |
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Completing the Structure of Water Law: Subterranean Waters; Indefinite Surface Waters; and Assignability |
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296 | (20) |
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Rights in Underground Watercourses-Theorizing in the Court of Exchequer |
|
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296 | (4) |
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Rights in Indefinite Surface Waters |
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300 | (2) |
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Chasemore v. Richards: Indefinite Waters and Assignability |
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302 | (13) |
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Bradford Corporation v. Pickles: Motive and the Exercise of Property Rights |
|
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315 | (1) |
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Assignability of Water Rights and the Appurtenancy Rule |
|
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316 | (12) |
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Bramwell's Commodification Experiment Rejected |
|
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320 | (4) |
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Physical Interference with River Channels |
|
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324 | (1) |
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Lord Blackburn and the Scots Theory of Riparianism |
|
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325 | (3) |
| Conclusion |
|
328 | (25) |
|
Internal and External Interpretation of the Law |
|
|
328 | (1) |
|
Harnessing Possession and Usufruct |
|
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329 | (2) |
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The Economic Ideology Account |
|
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331 | (5) |
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The Transaction Costs Account |
|
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336 | (7) |
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Evidence and Doctrine: 'Fact' Becomes 'Law' |
|
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343 | (3) |
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Institutional Design and the 'Tragedy of the Commons' |
|
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346 | (4) |
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Public Power and Private Rights |
|
|
350 | (3) |
| Bibliography |
|
353 | (38) |
| Index |
|
391 | |