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FIDUCIARY OWNERSHIP AND TRUSTS IN A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE

  • Daniel Clarry (a1)
Abstract
Abstract

Ownership is an essential feature of trusts that serves as a useful analytical and comparative tool in order to cross legal traditions and compare different legal institutions, which to a greater or lesser extent serve similar socio-economic and legal functions. The concentration on ownership enables one to burrow down into the normative roots of different legal traditions. This article comprises three substantive parts: first, characterizing ownership and the manner in which this concept distinguishes the civil and common law traditions; second, contextualizing ownership in relation to trusts from different legal systems; and, third, conceptualizing some contemporary challenges arising out of the divergent nature of ownership in the phenomenology of the trust paradigm, the value of the trust to comparative law and its effect on the civil law as a distinct tradition. It is argued that trusts necessarily involve the fiduciary administration of property and that ‘fiduciary ownership’ is a better shorthand description of the encumbered nature of trust property, rather than ‘dual’ or ‘split’ ownership, which is misleading and mistaken.

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This list contains references from the content that can be linked to their source. For a full set of references and notes please see the PDF or HTML where available.

L Smith (ed), The Worlds of the Trust (CUP2013)

L Smith (ed), Re-imagining The Trust: Trusts in Civil Law (CUP2012)

DL Carey Miller, ‘Transfer of Ownership’ and G Gretton, ‘Trusts’ in K Reid and R Zimmermann (eds), A History of Private Law in Scotland (OUP2000) 269304

MW Hesselink, ‘The Ideal of Codification and the Dynamics of Europeanisation: The Dutch Experience’ (2006) 12 ELJ 279

D Fox, ‘Non-Excludable Trustee Duties’ (2011) 17 Trusts & Trustees 17, 18

M Lupoi, ‘The Shapeless Trust’ (1995) 1 Trusts & Trustees 15

B Rudden, ‘Things as Thing and Things as Wealth’ (1994) 14 OJLS 81

EN Lorenz, ‘Atmospheric Predictability As Revealed by Naturally Occurring Analogues’ (1969) 26(4) Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences 623

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International & Comparative Law Quarterly
  • ISSN: 0020-5893
  • EISSN: 1471-6895
  • URL: /core/journals/international-and-comparative-law-quarterly
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