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Property rights and poverty : political argument in Britain, 1605-1834 / Thomas A. Horne.
Main entry:

Horne, Thomas A. (Thomas Allen), 1947-

Title & Author:

Property rights and poverty : political argument in Britain, 1605-1834 / Thomas A. Horne.

Publication:

Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, ©1990.

Description:

296 pages ; 24 cm

Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 269-282) and index.
Summary:

Focusing primarily on British political thought from the mid-1600s to the mid-1800s, Thomas Horne examines the philosophical links between property rights and welfare rights. He demonstrates that the defense of property did not preclude a rationale for aiding the poor. In doing so, he provides valuable insights into the origins of both classical liberalism and the contemporary welfare state. Horne first considers the writings of Hugo Grotius, the Dutch philosopher and jurist who laid out the terms for the debate over owning property as a natural right. Like later natural law theorists, Grotius was concerned with the question of how God's grant of the earth to all humanity could be reconciled with the idea of owning private property. Horne continues by surveying the writings of a wide range of political thinkers--John Locke, David Hume, Jeremy Bentham, and many others--in order to follow the progress of the property rights debate in England through the seventeenth, eighteenth, and early nineteenth centuries. According to Horne, virtually every defense of property rights written during this period carried with it a self-limiting feature that took into account the welfare rights of those without property. Thus, while British political thought typically defended individual property rights as consistent with--even demanded by--natural law, it also insisted that all individuals had a right, under some circumstances, to the use of resources necessary for their welfare. The right to exclude and the right to be included were not understood as necessarily contradictory or antagonistic aspects of a just property arrangement. Instead, the problem posed by the tradition of property theory presented here was how to recognize both property rights and welfare rights in a single legal code.

ISBN:

0807819123 (alk. paper)
9780807819128 (alk. paper)

Subject:

Right of property Great Britain History.
Welfare rights movement Great Britain History.
Political science Great Britain History.
Droit de propriété Grande-Bretagne Histoire.
Défense des droits économiques et sociaux Grande-Bretagne Histoire.
Political science.
Right of property.
Welfare rights movement.
Eigendomsrecht.
Sociale rechtvaardigheid.
Politieke theorieën.
Eigendomsverhoudingen.
Sociaal recht.
Great Britain.
Property History

Form/genre:

History.

Holdings:

Location: Library main 324136
Call No.: 324136
Copy: 1
Status: Available

Actions:
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