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This book addresses challenges that new technologies and the big
data revolution pose to existing regulatory and legal frameworks.
The volume discusses issues such as blockchain and its implications
for property transactions and taxes, three (or four) dimensional
title registration, land use and urban planning in the age of big
data, and the future of property rights in light of these changes.
The book brings together an interdisciplinary collection of
chapters that revolve around the potential influence of disruptive
technologies on existing legal norms and the future development of
real estate markets. The book is divided into five parts. Part I
presents a survey of the current available research on blockchain
and real estate. Part II provides a background on property law for
the volume, grounding it in fundamental theory. Part III discusses
the changing landscapes of property rights while Part IV debates
the potential effects of blockchain on land registration. Finally
the book concludes with Part V, which is devoted to new
technological applications relevant to real estate. Providing an
interdisciplinary perspective on emerging technologies that have
the potential to disrupt the real estate industry and the
regulation of it, this book will appeal to a broad audience,
consisting of scholars, policy-makers, practitioners, and students,
interested in real estate, law, economics, blockchain, and
technology policy.
This book discusses the fundamental issues regarding the effect of
real estate regulation on housing, urban development, and
considerations of justice and efficiency. Bringing together the
contributions of prominent scholars representing diverse
methodologies and academic disciplines, this book offers new
perspectives on core topics such as the effectiveness of land use
regulation in terms of housing availability, enhanced equality, and
sustainable development; and different modes of regulation and
their mutual influences. The book's eleven chapters are divided
into five parts which address different aspects of real estate
regulation, combining theoretical analysis with a close observation
of diverse case studies, from North America and Europe to China,
the Middle East, and developing economies. Part I offers
cutting-edge analysis on how to measure, model, and understand the
impact of zoning and other modes of real estate regulation, from
economic and normative theoretical viewpoints. Part II complements
Part I by providing historical observations and empirical knowledge
on the actual contribution of zoning and historical conservation
regulation to cities' shape. Part III considers the outcomes of
business and industrial land development policies. Part IV studies
urban land development regulation and allows to compare between two
relevant case studies-one from Germany, and the other from Poland.
Finally, Part V concerns standardization in the real estate market
by analyzing the justification and outcomes of such attempts,
particularly in the mortgages market. Providing an interface
between theory and practice, the book will appeal to a broad
audience, consisting of scholars, policy-makers, practitioners, and
students, interested in an interdisciplinary overlook on real
estate regulation.
This book addresses challenges that new technologies and the big
data revolution pose to existing regulatory and legal frameworks.
The volume discusses issues such as blockchain and its implications
for property transactions and taxes, three (or four) dimensional
title registration, land use and urban planning in the age of big
data, and the future of property rights in light of these changes.
The book brings together an interdisciplinary collection of
chapters that revolve around the potential influence of disruptive
technologies on existing legal norms and the future development of
real estate markets. The book is divided into five parts. Part I
presents a survey of the current available research on blockchain
and real estate. Part II provides a background on property law for
the volume, grounding it in fundamental theory. Part III discusses
the changing landscapes of property rights while Part IV debates
the potential effects of blockchain on land registration. Finally
the book concludes with Part V, which is devoted to new
technological applications relevant to real estate. Providing an
interdisciplinary perspective on emerging technologies that have
the potential to disrupt the real estate industry and the
regulation of it, this book will appeal to a broad audience,
consisting of scholars, policy-makers, practitioners, and students,
interested in real estate, law, economics, blockchain, and
technology policy.
This book discusses the fundamental issues regarding the effect of
real estate regulation on housing, urban development, and
considerations of justice and efficiency. Bringing together the
contributions of prominent scholars representing diverse
methodologies and academic disciplines, this book offers new
perspectives on core topics such as the effectiveness of land use
regulation in terms of housing availability, enhanced equality, and
sustainable development; and different modes of regulation and
their mutual influences. The book's eleven chapters are divided
into five parts which address different aspects of real estate
regulation, combining theoretical analysis with a close observation
of diverse case studies, from North America and Europe to China,
the Middle East, and developing economies. Part I offers
cutting-edge analysis on how to measure, model, and understand the
impact of zoning and other modes of real estate regulation, from
economic and normative theoretical viewpoints. Part II complements
Part I by providing historical observations and empirical knowledge
on the actual contribution of zoning and historical conservation
regulation to cities' shape. Part III considers the outcomes of
business and industrial land development policies. Part IV studies
urban land development regulation and allows to compare between two
relevant case studies-one from Germany, and the other from Poland.
Finally, Part V concerns standardization in the real estate market
by analyzing the justification and outcomes of such attempts,
particularly in the mortgages market. Providing an interface
between theory and practice, the book will appeal to a broad
audience, consisting of scholars, policy-makers, practitioners, and
students, interested in an interdisciplinary overlook on real
estate regulation.
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