斯泰伦博斯的一个晴朗的日子:Bram Akkermans, Ernst Marais和Eveline Ramaekers的评论(编)物权法视角II (Intersentia 2014)

J. Lovett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文回顾了最近发表的一篇文章,这些文章来自青年财产法论坛(YPLF)和一个密切相关的大师班的会议,这两个会议都是在2012年11月在斯坦陵博斯大学高级研究所举行的。从国籍和经历来看,作者是一个多元化的群体。该文集中最大的一组文章由来自欧洲大陆的新兴物权法学者撰写,探讨了传统民法物权法学说中的概念,特别关注物和物权分类的客观和主观方法之间的差异。这些文章的作者(Sofie Bouly, Shaun Charlton, Dorothy Gruyaert, Ann Apers, Mitzi Wiese, Valerie Twehuysen和Ellen Dewitte)除了展示了这些传统理论概念的弹性之外,还揭示了对客观分类措施的偏好,但有时很难将这种偏好与他们研究的法律体系中法院倾向于更主观的分类决定相协调。相比之下,文集中的另外两位作者(伊芙琳·拉梅克斯和萨布丽娜·普拉杜鲁)主要关注欧洲人权法院的宪法性财产法判决,他们对欧洲人权法院在其对《欧洲人权公约第一议定书》第1条的“公平平衡”解释中对开放性决策的接受更为满意。文集中另外两篇文章的作者有着非常不同的关注点。其中一本(布兰登·埃奇沃斯)探讨了商业租赁法律中的历史适应性,而另一本(苏珊·布莱特和丽莎·怀特豪斯)则叙述了一项实证研究,即在租户和抵押人失去住宅所有权的情况下,非金融因素的作用。本书的两位作者(布拉姆·阿克曼斯和约瑟夫·辛格)分别探讨了财产理论和物权法决策规范的广泛问题,即无数条款原则和“理性规则”的运作。这些作者表明,有可能系统地思考物权法制度如何限制财产的数量或被承认的财产类型,灵活的标准和司法自由裁量权可以成为明确、机械的物权法规则的有价值的补充。最后,三篇文章讨论了南非物权法的前沿问题。这些文章的作者(Jeannie van Wyk, Bjorn Hoops和Gerrit Pienarr)揭示了以环境可持续的方式开发南非自然资源的必要性所带来的挑战,以及调和南非土地保有权的传统习俗与当代宪法规范的必要性。皮纳尔展示了其他财产领域的创新,例如共管公寓法,可以作为解决当代问题的资源库。最后,作者认为,本书将成为对比较财产法感兴趣的学者的宝贵资源,因为它的贡献很好地说明了来自不同国家背景的财产法学者可以为他们的研究带来的有时不同的假设。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
One Fine Day in Stellenbosch: A Review of Bram Akkermans, Ernst Marais and Eveline Ramaekers (eds) Property Law Perspectives II (Intersentia 2014)
This essay reviews a recently published collection of articles that originated from a conference of the Young Property Law Forum (YPLF) and a closely linked master class, both of which took place in November 2012 at Stellenbosch University's Institute for Advanced Study. The authors are a diverse group in terms of nationality and experience.The largest group of articles in the collection, authored by emerging property law scholars from Continental Europe, explores concepts in traditional civil law property law doctrine, with a particular focus on the difference between objective and subjective methods of classifying things and real rights. In addition to demonstrating the resiliency of some of these traditional doctrinal concepts, the authors of these articles (Sofie Bouly, Shaun Charlton, Dorothy Gruyaert, Ann Apers, Mitzi Wiese, Valerie Twehuysen, and Ellen Dewitte) reveal a preference for objective measures of classification but struggle at times to reconcile this preference with the tendency of courts in the legal systems they study to engage in more subjective classification determinations. In contrast, two other authors of articles in the collection (Eveline Ramaekers and Sabrina Praduroux), who are primarily concerned with constitutional property law decisions of the European Court of Human Rights, are more comfortable with that court's embrace of open-textured decision-making in its "fair balance" interpretation of Article 1 to the First Protocol of the European Convention of Human Rights. The authors of two more articles in the collection have a very different focus. One (Brendan Edgeworth) explores historical adaptations in the law of commercial leaseholds, while the others (Susan Bright and Lisa Whitehouse) recount an empirical study of the role of non-financial considerations in cases in which tenants and mortgagors lose possession of their residences. Two authors in the collection (Bram Akkermans and Joseph Singer) address broad questions of property theory and property law decision making norms-the operation of the numerus clausus principle and "rules of reason" respectively. These authors show that it is possible to think systemically about how a property law system sets limits on the number or recognized property types and that flexible standards and judicial discretion can be valuable supplements to clear, mechanistic property law rules. Finally, three articles address issues at the forefront of South African property law. The authors of these articles (Jeannie van Wyk, Bjorn Hoops, and Gerrit Pienarr) reveal the challenges posed by the need to develop South Africa's natural resources in an environmentally sustainable manner and the need to reconcile traditional customs regarding land tenure in South Africa with contemporary constitutional norms. Pienarr shows how innovations in other areas of property, for example condominium law, can serve as a repository for solutions to contemporary problems. In the end, this reviewer suggests that this volume will become a valuable resource for scholars interested in comparative property law because its contributions illustrate so well the sometimes divergent assumptions that property law scholars from different national backgrounds can bring to their scholarship.
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