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Leasehold estate

About: Leasehold estate is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1589 publications have been published within this topic receiving 21480 citations. The topic is also known as: leasehold & tenancy.


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MonographDOI
01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: In this article, the market and economic history of Tokugawa Japan is studied in the context of the 17th and 18th century economy and the early village and its transformation.
Abstract: Abbreviations Introduction Chapter 1: The Market and Economic Historiography of Tokugawa Japan State Formation and the 17th and 18th Century Economy Economic Change and the Demongraphic Factor Demise of the Medieval Property Structure Constitution of a New Property Structure Conclusion Chapter 2: The Early Village and its Transformation Core and Periphery: Variations in the Nature and Course of Development The Village: Polarization and the Era of Transition The Rural Social Order and the Power of Local Elites The Landlord Estate: Household and Unit of Production The First Phase of Change: Formation of a Small Peasant Society Making the Estate Productive Conclusion Chapter 3: Construction of Peasant Land Relations A Break with the Past The Land System and Peasant Tenure Land into Capital The Second Phase of Change: Land Pawning The Kyoho Reforms: A Crisis of Feudal Revenues Turning Peasants into Tenants Landlord and Landlordly Prerogatives Conclusion Chapter 4: Social Change and Commercialization in the Periphery Peasant and Landlord during the Era of Transition The New Tokugawa Landlord Rent: The Changing Profile of Landlord Income Horigane: Tenancy in a Tokugawa Village Fukushima Prefecture: Early Landlords and Tenants Nishino and Momozono Village: Tenancy and By-employment Conclusion Chapter 5: An Alternative Trajectory of Development: The Kinai A Different Start: Villages in the Kinai A Course of its Own: Production Organization in the Kinai Conclusion Epilogue Tables Bibliography

5 citations

01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: In many transitional economies, public officials have been experimenting with public leasehold systems to minimize economic and political conflicts that arise from land reform as discussed by the authors, and one hope is that leasing public land may lessen tension between communists' (or socialist) desire to uphold public land ownership and reformists' demand for increasing private property rights.
Abstract: SUMMARY In many transitional economies, public officials have been experimenting with public leasehold systems to minimize economic and political conflicts that arise from land reform. One hope is that leasing public land may lessen tension between communists’ (or socialist) desire to uphold public land ownership and reformists’ demand for increasing private property rights. This paper is the author’s summary of “Leasing Public Land, Policy Debates and International Experiences” , Lincoln Institute of Land Policy 2003, which discusses and compares land leasing experiences from around the world. The paper begins with a set of charts showing the major features of public land leasing for a select group of countries around the world. Then the author will present some lessons learned from these international experiences, as well as common themes found across the varied land leasing systems of the world. This paper will conclude with a narrative discussion of these systems and their history of public land leasing, and will include some of the perceived strengths and weaknesses of the systems and how they changed over time.

5 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors model the threat of termination in a multi-period framework and show that a landlord may prefer a landed rather than a landless tenant, although tenants are free to choose the amount of land for cropsharing, the marginal product of land is not driven down to zero.
Abstract: Landlords in some countries commonly adopt a policy of short-term leasing such that their tenants perpetually face a threat of termination of the contracts if their performance is not satisfactory. By explicitly modelling the threat of termination in a multi-period framework, this paper demonstrates that: (a) a landlord may prefer a landed rather than a landless tenant, (b) although tenants are free to choose the amount of land for cropsharing, the marginal product of land is not driven down to zero, and (c) the efficiency of cropshare cultivation may not be ranked unambiguously against owner or wage cultivation.

5 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The United States of America, especially its free sector, is usually depicted as a yeoman republic largely peopled by small-scale, independent landowners as discussed by the authors, and the enduring power of this perception derives from a tendency in the historiography of republicanism to accept the ideal of the independent husbandman as a reality.
Abstract: T THE fledgling United States of America, especially its free sector, is usually depicted as a yeoman republic largely peopled by smallscale, independent landowners. The enduring power of this perception derives from a tendency in the historiography of republicanism to accept the ideal of the independent husbandman as a reality.1 Yet landlessness and dependence on others for a living were increasingly common in the eighteenth century. Even in slave economies, planters routinely employed large numbers of wage laborers and tenants.2 A few

5 citations

Book
01 Jan 1975
TL;DR: This book discusses the structure of modern land law, tenancy, and the rights and duties of the parties under a lease or tenancy, as well as other aspects of property law.
Abstract: Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION Chapter 2 ESTATES AND FIXTURES Chapter 3 LAW AND EQUITY Chapter 4 THE STRUCTURE OF MODERN LAND LAW Chapter 5 REGISTERED TITLE Chapter 6 SALE OF LAND: CONTRACTS, CONVEYANCING AND LAND CHARGES Chapter 7 TRUSTS AND REAL PROPERTY Chapter 8 Co-OWNERSHIP Chapter 9 PROPRIETARY ESTOPPEL Chapter 10 LICENCES Chapter 11 NATURE AND CREATION OF LEASE Chapter 12 DETERMINATION OF TENANCIES Chapter 13 RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF THE PARTIES UNDER A LEASE OR TENANCY Chapter 14 LEASEHOLD COVENANTS Chapter 15 EASEMENTS, PROFITS AND INCORPOREAL HERIDITAMENTS Chapter 16 FREEHOLD COVENANTS Chapter 17 MORTGAGES Chapter 18 ADVERSE POSSESSION AND LIMITATION PERIODS

5 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202340
2022125
202128
202028
201956
201857