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Beskrivelse
This volume is the eighth instalment in the Property Law Perspectives Series. Produced by the Young Property Lawyers' Forum (www.yplf.net), a global network of early career property law scholars, this volume presents the carefully curated highlights of two consecutive conferences held virtually in 2021 and 2022. A broad range of property law topics are covered in this book within the three themes of Property and Sustainability', Property and Society in Extraordinary Times', and Property Law for the Future'. The chapters have been submitted by talented young researchers from jurisdictions around the world including Italy, Peru, and South Africa, with each chapter providing an interesting analysis of an important aspect of property law. This book merits the attention of every student and academic interested in new developments in property scholarship, as well as of legal practitioners looking to place societal developments into a legal context. About the editors: Jill Robbie is Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Glasgow. She is co-founder of the YPLF and her research interest lies within property law and natural resources.
Flore Vavourakis is a PhD Candidate at the KU Leuven Institute for Property Law in Belgium. Her research concentrates on private water law and environmental law from an interdisciplinary perspective.
V??ir Sm?ri Petersen is an Associate Professor of Commercial Law at the University of Iceland and an External PhD Candidate at the University of Maastricht. His main research interests are in the field of property law and law of obligations. V??ir also holds positions outside of academia, including being a member of the Housing Complaints Committee, which deals with disputes in the areas of lease law and condominium law.
Ivan Allegranti is a PhD Candidate in Civil Law at the University of Camerino in Italy. His primary research interests are related to the right to remain in one's own homeland, particularly triggered by natural hazards. He is a member of several scientific associations, including Finance Watch and YOUNGO - UNFCCC, advocating both within the academic community and among the general public for the birth of an effective legal framework that ensures everyone's right to remain in their own homeland.
Aleksa Radonjic is an Assistant Professor at the Union University Law School Belgrade, Serbia where he teaches property law and consumer law. He is currently a Co-Chair of the Board of Advice of the YPLF.