联邦历史保护在财产理论中的“地位”

Sam W. Gieryn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

进步财产理论学者经常以历史遗迹保护为例,说明财产本身是如何强制使用的。历史建筑的公共利益证明限制其可用用途是合理的。然而,迄今为止,进步财产理论只考虑了适用于州和地方政权的历史保护,而放弃了根据《国家历史保护法案》对联邦结构的分析。本文建立了进步产权理论的基本原则与联邦历史文物保护之间的协同作用,并建议联邦历史文物保护的识别和激励结构为进步产权理论走向更广泛应用的过程提供了模型。本文第一部分解释了进步财产理论与联邦历史保护的相似之处。通过对有关进步理论的基础条款(“关于进步财产的声明”)和《国家历史保护法案》的“目的”部分进行明确的文本比较,本节表明,联邦历史保护为将进步理论付诸实践提供了一种模式。第二部分区分了州法律和地方历史保护条例与联邦法律。联邦和地方保护制度通常被误解为暗示类似的财产限制。*吉林先生是美国住房和城市发展部(HUD)的律师顾问。本文所表达的观点不代表住房和城市发展部或美国政府的观点。本文中的研究和信息仅反映作者的观点,不反映美国政府,HUD或任何其他联邦机构的观点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Federal Historic Preservation's "Place" in Property Theory
Progressive Property Theory scholars often point to historic preservation as an example of how property, itself, imposes an obligatory use. A historic structure’s public benefit justifies restrictions in available uses. To date, however, Progressive Property Theory has considered historic preservation only as it is applied in state and local regimes, forgoing an analysis of the federal structure under the National Historic Preservation Act. This article establishes a synergy between the underlying principles of Progressive Property Theory and federal historic preservation and suggests that federal historic preservation’s identification and incentivization structures model a process that could move Progressive Property Theory toward wider applications. Part I of this article explains the similarities between Progressive Property Theory and federal historic preservation. Using explicit textual comparisons between the foundational article on progressive theory (“A Statement of Progressive Property”) and the “purpose” section of the National Historic Preservation Act, this section demonstrates that federal historic preservation provides a model for putting progressive theory into practice. Part II differentiates state law and local historic preservation ordinances from federal law. Federal and local preservation regimes are commonly misunderstood to imply similar property restrictions. * Mr. Gieryn is an Attorney-Advisor with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The views expressed in this writing do not reflect the views of HUD or the U.S. government. The research and information in this article reflect only the opinion of the author and do not reflect those of the U.S. government, HUD, or any other federal agency.
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