How to regulate the transfer of wealth from one generation to
the next has been hotly debated among politicians, legal scholars,
sociologists, economists, and philosophers for centuries.
Bequeathing wealth is a vital ingredient of family solidarity. But
does the reproduction of social inequality through inheritance
square with the principle of equal opportunity? Does democracy
suffer when family wealth becomes political power?
The first in-depth, comparative study of the development of
inheritance law in the United States, France, and Germany,
"Inherited Wealth" investigates longstanding political and
intellectual debates over inheritance laws and explains why these
laws still differ so greatly among these countries. Using a
sociological perspective, Jens Beckert sheds light on the four most
controversial issues in inheritance law during the past two
centuries: the freedom to dispose of one's property as one wishes,
the rights of family members to the wealth bequeathed, the
dissolution of entails (which restrict inheritance to specific
classes of heirs), and estate taxation. Beckert shows that while
the United States, France, and Germany have all long defended
inheritance rights based on the notion of individual property
rights, they have justified limitations on inheritance rights in
profoundly different ways, reflecting culturally specific ways of
understanding the problems of inherited wealth.
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