Posts

Showing posts from November, 2021

Collective Action and a Right to Housing

 Lately, we have been reading John R. Commons' Institutional Economics (Part I).  In it, Commons lays the foundations for a lot of what he sees as the basis of economic transactions, heavily rooted in human psychology, action, and interaction (or, as we like to say-- human interdependence). It is a dense book as explained briefly in Rodrigo's blog contribution last week . One notable component of the Commonsonian approach to economics is the fundamental importance of collective action, or the role collective action plays in shaping the legal rules and informal institutions of the world around us. It's interesting to think about how collective action in relation to housing rights has or may continue to impact existing property law. In Dr. Lisa Alexander's 2015 contribution to the Nebraska Law Review titled, Occupying the Constitutional Right toHousing , she walks through the various Occupy and other housing-strike movements of the recent past, detailing how each is a for