class="tdl">Landownership in History
8 |
|
No Private Ownership in Pre-Agricultural Conditions |
10 |
|
How the Change Probably Took Place |
12 |
|
Limited Character of Primitive Common Ownership |
14 |
|
Private Ownership General in Historical Times |
15 |
|
Conclusions from History |
17 |
III |
The Arguments Against Private Landownership |
19 |
|
Arguments by Socialists |
19 |
|
Henry George's Attack on the Title of First Occupancy |
21 |
|
His Defence of the Title of Labour |
24 |
|
The Right of all Men to the Bounty of the Earth |
30 |
|
The Alleged Right of the Community to Land Values |
39 |
IV |
Private Ownership the Best System of Land Tenure |
48 |
|
The Socialist Proposals Impracticable |
48 |
|
Inferiority of the Single Tax System |
51 |
V |
Private Landownership a Natural Right |
56 |
|
Three Principal Kinds of Natural Rights |
57 |
|
Private Landownership Indirectly Necessary for Individual Welfare |
59 |
|
Excessive Interpretations of the Right of Private Landownership |
61 |
|
The Doctrine of the Fathers and the Theologians |
62 |
|
The Teaching of Pope Leo XIII |
64 |
VI |
Limitations of the Landowner's Right to Rent |
67 |
|
The Tenant's Right to a Decent Livelihood |
69 |
|
The Labourer's Claim Upon the Rent |
71 |
VII |
Defects of the Existing Land System |
74 |
|
Landownership and Monopoly |
75 |
|
Excessive Gains from Private Landownership |
80 |
|
Exclusion from the Land |
90 |
VIII |
Methods of Reforming Our Land System |
94 |
|
The Leasing System |
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