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The loss of a home can lead to major violations of a person's
dignity and human rights. Yet, evictions take place everyday in all
countries across Europe. This book provides a comparative
assessment of human rights, administrative, procedural and public
policy norms, in the context of eviction, across a number of
European jurisdictions. Through this comparison the book exposes
the emergence of consistent, Europe-wide standards and norms. With
contributions from experts across Europe, the chapters provide an
assessment of eviction procedures in 11 jurisdictions, including
Germany, France, Spain, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom.
Each chapter examines a number of factors relating to evictions in
the respective jurisdiction, such as, the human rights and legal
framework, nature and extent of evictions taking place, risk
factors leading to evictions and relevant best practice guidance.
All together, this book will make a significant contribution to the
understanding of the similarities and differences between eviction
policies across European states. As the first work of it?s kind to
provide an in-depth comparison of eviction policies across Europe,
Loss of Homes and Evictions Across Europe will be of great interest
to those who are researching European housing law and human rights
law and policy. Housing law and public policy makers, and those
working within associated European institutions, will also find the
data and accompanying analysis invaluable for informing their work.
Contributors include: E. Bargelli, W. Borysiak, P. Decker, G.
Donadio, R.M. Garcia, M.F. Hrast, C. Hunter, P. Kenna, S.
Nasarre-Aznar, S. Nikolic, N. Pleace, C.U. Schmid, P. Sparkes, N.
Teller, D. Vermeir, J. Verstraete, M. Vols
How should a landowner respond when a squatter occupies their land?
This book discusses the issues focussing on vindicatio, possessory
remedies and trespass, but also explores administrative procedures
for their removal. In many cases, these actions derive from Roman
laws, which are expertly explored in an introductory chapter. Also
included is a chapter exploring human rights interventions in such
actions. Twelve case studies offer an extensive and comparative
analysis across sixteen European jurisdictions. The basic
defendants covered are squatters taking over a home, environmental
protesters, licensees and former tenants. The case studies include,
amongst others, self-help; restitution; competing claims to
ownership (and the relevance of registration systems to claims to
ownership); adverse possession; neighbours; nuisance and
encroachment.
This book is designed to complement the author's A New Land
Law,integrating with that work in its simplified terminology, and
emphasising a three-fold functional classification of leases -
short residential tenancies, long residential leases and commercial
leases. Rented housing is treated as a unified whole, with
particular prominence being given to shorthold arrangements. The
book includes reference to the changes to the allocation and
homelessness regimes proposed by Part II of the Homes Bill 2000. It
also considers the impact of the Human Rights Act 1998, the changes
to repossession procedures implemented by the Woolf Reforms, and
the year 2000 bumper crop of decisions on housing law. Leasehold
tenure is undergoing dramatic changes. The book draws a functional
distinction between long residential leases and rental
arrangements, based on the registrability of long leases, their
freedom from rent controls and security of tenure, special controls
of management and forfeiture, and enfranchisement rights. Extensive
coverage is given to the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Bill 2000,
introduced into the House of Lords in December 2000, and promising
improvements in the enfranchisement schemes, additional management
controls, and a commonhold scheme. Topics on commercial leases
(business and agricultural) given special attention include the
reasonable recipient principle for the construction of notices, a
decision on the effect on a sub-tenant of an upwards notice to quit
by his head tenant, and Law Commission proposals on the Termination
of Tenancies (1999). Contents: 1. Renting 2. Contractual Duration
3. Shortholds 4. Allocation and Homelessness 5. Full Residential
Security 6. Limited Security Arrangements 7. Tied Accommodation 8.
Domestic Protection 9. Residential Rents 10. Condition of Rented
Property 11. Assignment 12. Peaceful Occupation 13. Residential
Repossession 14. Leasehold Homes 15. Individual Enfranchisement 16.
Flat Schemes 17. Commonhold 18. Right to Buy 19. Commercial Grants
20. Renewable Business Leases 21. Termination without Renewal 22.
Agricultural Leases 23. Freedom of Business Contract 24. Business
Rents 25. Repairs to Business Premises 26. Business Leases of Part
27. Dealings 28. Running of Covenants 29. Forfeiture
In his remarkable, path-breaking new book, Peter Sparkes takes
stock of the development of a distinctive body of European land
law, taking as his starting point the idea that methods of
land-holding permitted by a legal system both shape and reflect the
attitudes of the land owners and society in general. However it
quickly becomes very difficult to test that idea when the society
in question is governed by an internal market composed of 30
countries (the EU-27, including Bulgaria and Romania, and the
EEA-3), whose property systems differ so markedly and which reflect
such widely differing cultures. Yet the internal market has already
effected a gradual equalisation and standardisation across Europe
as foreign capital spreads to create equality of yield. "We all
become better off by joining a larger trading block but the social
consequences will be profound: Brits will need to emigrate to the
continent to afford a home, Bulgarians will need to make way for
them along the Black Sea coast, and title deeds will be reshuffled
all over Europe on a giant Monopoly board" writes the author in his
preface, before embarking on a dispassionate examination of the
beginning of that process of profound change. The opening chapters
are devoted to an explanation of how the internal market has
created a substantive European land law. Chapter 3 examines the
rise of a distinctive European land law, and the development of
conflicts principles applying to recovery of land. Chapters 5 to 9
on the marketing and sale of land focus upon Community competence
on consumer protection. The decision to treat land as a product
like any other in the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive will
have wide ranging and far reaching implications and, apart from
marketing of land and of timeshares, other chapters deal with
conveyancing, contracting and the emerging market in mortgage
credit. The book concludes with a miscellany of conflicts rules
which are gradually coalescing and form the elements from which a
substantive European land law can be forged. A number of topics
which it is not possible to cover in detail (VAT, other taxes,
environmental controls and agriculture) are touched on briefly, and
the same is true of international aspects of trusts and succession.
This book is designed to complement the author's A New Land
Law,integrating with that work in its simplified terminology, and
emphasising a three-fold functional classification of leases -
short residential tenancies, long residential leases and commercial
leases. Rented housing is treated as a unified whole, with
particular prominence being given to shorthold arrangements. The
book includes reference to the changes to the allocation and
homelessness regimes proposed by Part II of the Homes Bill 2000. It
also considers the impact of the Human Rights Act 1998, the changes
to repossession procedures implemented by the Woolf Reforms, and
the year 2000 bumper crop of decisions on housing law. Leasehold
tenure is undergoing dramatic changes. The book draws a functional
distinction between long residential leases and rental
arrangements, based on the registrability of long leases, their
freedom from rent controls and security of tenure, special controls
of management and forfeiture, and enfranchisement rights. Extensive
coverage is given to the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Bill 2000,
introduced into the House of Lords in December 2000, and promising
improvements in the enfranchisement schemes, additional management
controls, and a commonhold scheme. Topics on commercial leases
(business and agricultural) given special attention include the
reasonable recipient principle for the construction of notices, a
decision on the effect on a sub-tenant of an upwards notice to quit
by his head tenant, and Law Commission proposals on the Termination
of Tenancies (1999). Contents: 1. Renting 2. Contractual Duration
3. Shortholds 4. Allocation and Homelessness 5. Full Residential
Security 6. Limited Security Arrangements 7. Tied Accommodation 8.
Domestic Protection 9. Residential Rents 10. Condition of Rented
Property 11. Assignment 12. Peaceful Occupation 13. Residential
Repossession 14. Leasehold Homes 15. Individual Enfranchisement 16.
Flat Schemes 17. Commonhold 18. Right to Buy 19. Commercial Grants
20. Renewable Business Leases 21. Termination without Renewal 22.
Agricultural Leases 23. Freedom of Business Contract 24. Business
Rents 25. Repairs to Business Premises 26. Business Leases of Part
27. Dealings 28. Running of Covenants 29. Forfeiture
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