National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Reasons for and legal forms of the restriction of land ownership rights
Čermáková, Kateřina ; Drobník, Jaroslav (advisor) ; Franková, Martina (referee)
1 Abstract Reasons for and legal forms of the restriction of land ownership rights The purpose of my thesis is to analyse the reasons for and the legal forms of the restriction of land ownership rights. Because the land ownership rights relate to both the private law and the public law, this theme is linked with almost all fields of our legal order. The thesis consists of four chapters. Chapter One is introductory and describes the content the paper is about. Chapter Two defines basic terminology used in the thesis: the proprietary rights, the land, the allotment, the real property and the proprietary rights to land. The chapter is subdivided into three parts. Part One describes proprietary right as one of the human right, which is protected by international conventions and the Declaration of basic rights and freedom. Part Two deals with the land specialities - such as the multifunctional character, the indispensableness, the limited extent, the impossibility of multiplication, the impossibility of placing the land elsewhere, the everlasting existence, the impossibility of consumption and the natural, not human origin. This part also explains other related legal concepts. Part Three discusses the land ownership rights and is subdivided into three sections, which provide the knowledge of object, subject and...
Reasons for and legal forms of the restriction of land ownership rights
Čermáková, Kateřina ; Drobník, Jaroslav (advisor) ; Franková, Martina (referee)
1 Abstract Reasons for and legal forms of the restriction of land ownership rights The purpose of my thesis is to analyse the reasons for and the legal forms of the restriction of land ownership rights. Because the land ownership rights relate to both the private law and the public law, this theme is linked with almost all fields of our legal order. The thesis consists of four chapters. Chapter One is introductory and describes the content the paper is about. Chapter Two defines basic terminology used in the thesis: the proprietary rights, the land, the allotment, the real property and the proprietary rights to land. The chapter is subdivided into three parts. Part One describes proprietary right as one of the human right, which is protected by international conventions and the Declaration of basic rights and freedom. Part Two deals with the land specialities - such as the multifunctional character, the indispensableness, the limited extent, the impossibility of multiplication, the impossibility of placing the land elsewhere, the everlasting existence, the impossibility of consumption and the natural, not human origin. This part also explains other related legal concepts. Part Three discusses the land ownership rights and is subdivided into three sections, which provide the knowledge of object, subject and...

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