scholarly journals Registration of Multi-Level Property Rights in 3D in The Netherlands: Two Cases and Next Steps in Further Implementation

2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jantien Stoter ◽  
Hendrik Ploeger ◽  
Ruben Roes ◽  
Els van der Riet ◽  
Filip Biljecki ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
J. Stoter ◽  
S. Ho ◽  
F. Biljecki

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> A significant number of studies has been carried out to establish 3D cadastre solutions to improve the registration of multi-level property. Since the inception of research on 3D cadastres (about 20 years ago), the world around us has changed significantly and this also partly changes the context regarding 3D cadastre: technology (e.g. visualisation of 3D information), acquisition techniques and BIM data availability, and policy and organisational structures. This paper aims to explore the implications of these changes on 3D cadastre research with a view to discussing considerations for a contemporary 3D cadastre for our times. The paper draws on social and technical trends, challenges, and gaps around 3D cadastre practices from three jurisdictions: the Australian state of Victoria, the Netherlands, and Singapore. The cases have been selected as examples of well-functioning and highly trusted cadastres and land registries committed to innovation in this area, and whose practitioners and researchers are leading the research in this domain. This set provides a breadth of insight that informs our discussion. However, we acknowledge the limitations of the findings as the research undertaken in these jurisdictions is not complicated by other issues with registration or cadastres as they may occur in other countries.</p>


Asy-Syari ah ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Iskandar Mirza

According to the form of legal development (al-tasyrî‘), nazhâriyyat al-‘uqûd is resulted from the transformation process of sources, principles, and bases of Islamic economic values which are derived from the Quran and the Sunna into the pracstical of Islamic business. It is also firstly begun through the analysis and translation on nazhâriyyat al-‘uqûd by the muslim scholars in the book of fiqh. The concept of business transaction (mafhum al-‘uqûd) in Islamic legal contract is based on three theories: First, the theory of property rights (nazhâriyyat al-milkiyyah ‘alâ al-mâl); Second, the theory of business transaction (nazhâriyyat al-‘uqûd); and Third, the theory of property management (nazhâriyyat al-intiqal al-milkiyyah). These are starting point to examine the consept of business transaction (mafhum al-‘uqûd) within Islamic legal contract to dealth with the Islamic practical rule of direct selling.


2016 ◽  
Vol 41 (04) ◽  
pp. 956-972 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wouter Veraart

The looting and systematic deprivation of the property rights of the Jewish population in the Netherlands and France during the years of occupation brought about a deprivation of dignity, since these measures were intended to hit these people in their capacities as legal subjects, destroying their abilities to take part in economic and social life. In the immediate postwar period, the restitution of property rights in both countries was closely connected and limited to an abstract conception of dignity restoration, understood as the renewed recognition of the dispossessed owners as free and equal citizen before the law. In the late 1990s, a new phase in the restoration of property rights took place on a much more collective and political level. In this second round of restitution, dignity restoration was directly connected with an explicit recognition of the particular, concrete suffering of the groups of victims involved.


2014 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 15-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Matthias Weber

Stewart Russell’s research work on combined heat and power / district heating (CHP/DH) in the UK was among the first empirical contributions to demonstrate that technological change is not just determined by seemingly objective technical and economic performance characteristics, but rather the result of social choices. His rich conceptual thinking is reconstructed in a coherent framework, and its explanatory power explored by analysing the innovation diff usion paradox of CHP/DH: in spite of very similar technical and economic characteristics, the patterns of innovation and diff usion diff er signifi cantly across countries. To this end, the evolution of CHP/DH in the UK, Germany and the Netherlands is compared. Russell’s ideas can be regarded as a predecessor of recent multi-level approaches to the analysis of socio-technical change. He put much emphasis on studying power relations for explaining the (non-) occurrence of socio-technical change; an issue that is still debated today.


2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 217-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ceyhun Haydaroğlu

Abstract In recent years, institutions and institutional structure have become some of the most popular concepts analyzed by economics theory. New growth theories have especially focused on the effects of institutions and institutional structure on a macro level. Property rights are one of the most important elements of this institutional structure. The relationship between property rights and economic growth have drawn the attention of many researchers and policymakers in recent years. The aim of this study, covering the period 2007–2014, is to examine the relationship between property rights and economic growth with the help of PARDL in OECD and EU countries. According to the result of a bounds test, there is cointegration between the variables. The long- and short-term relationships between series were determined and the results taken from the analysis show that there is a positive effect on economic growth in those countries.


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