
Contents
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The Everyday and the Everywhere The Everyday and the Everywhere
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Distinguishing the Acceptable from the Unthinkable Distinguishing the Acceptable from the Unthinkable
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Current Devastation and Abandonment: No Threat to Value Current Devastation and Abandonment: No Threat to Value
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Imminent Improvement: Benefits to those with Investments Imminent Improvement: Benefits to those with Investments
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Beyond Libertarian and Left Explanations Beyond Libertarian and Left Explanations
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Challenging a Commitment to Property as Rights to Control Challenging a Commitment to Property as Rights to Control
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Benefits for the Invested, Without the Exchange-Value/Use-Value Distinction Benefits for the Invested, Without the Exchange-Value/Use-Value Distinction
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Looking for Limits to Governments’ Eminent Domain Power Looking for Limits to Governments’ Eminent Domain Power
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3 Rhetoric Without a Cause: Beyond Libertarian and Left Cries of Abuse
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Published:September 2014
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Abstract
When they cry abuse in eminent domain battles, people appeal to a libertarian ideal about private rights or to a left-oriented ideal about protecting the poor against developers. This chapter argues that these after-the-fact justifications are often mistaken for the actual causes of conflicts. The chapter shares a comprehensive view of property takings—how, where, and for what kind of redevelopment government officials take properties, and when citizen raise objections. It presents a summary of all eminent domain cases in Philadelphia, 1992–2007, and compares them to the full universe of potential cases (every privately owned property in the city). By showing how government’s routine uses of eminent domain demonstrated respect for all kinds of value in properties, rather than property title or use-value, the chapter begins to demonstrate how the conception of property as investment explains government legitimacy in eminent domain policy.
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