Order by phone 1-866-808-5635 (M-F 10am - 4pm CST) Help/FAQs / LawRewards / Gift Certificates / Sell Us Your Law School Textbooks

Your Discount Online Law Bookstore!

My Cart 0 $0.00
Only $48.99 until FREE SHIPPING!
Only $48.99 until FREE SHIPPING!
  • Menu
  • Account

Order by phone 1-866-808-5635 (M-F 9am-5pm CST)

Experiencing Property

  • Edition : 1st ed., 2025
  • Author(s) : Medill

Log in or create an account to get 278 LawReward points on this purchase!

    • ISBN: 9781685615062
    • SKU: 10584
    • Condition: New
    • Format: Hardcover/Access Code

    $278.40

    List Price: $290.00

    Out Of Stock

    CLICK HERE to get notified when this item is back in-stock!

    Get notified when this product is back in stock

Experiencing Property takes a unique approach to Property Law and related skills development by emphasizing student professional identity formation and the historical and cultural forces that influence Property Law and society. Using this innovative textbook, students experience Property Law by performing the lawyering tasks associated with Property Law issues while being challenged to reflect on their own past and future experiences with the law.

Written by an award-winning teacher and member of the American College of Real Estate Lawyers, Experiencing Property relies on a simplified narrative approach to introduce key vocabulary terms, fundamental concepts, and legal rules before examining illustrative cases. Additional discussion questions, applied problems, and lawyering exercises provide students with the pedagogical foundation they need to demonstrate competence on the NextGen Bar Exam. Experiencing Property complements these traditional reading materials with relevant excerpts from the popular literature, such as The Color of Law and Evicted!, to situate Property Law in its broader historical and societal context.

Consistent with its orientation toward experiencing Property Law as a practicing lawyer would, the text contains actual legal documents. Each chapter concludes with a student-friendly Study Guide to assist students in summarizing and outlining the material. 

Key features of Experiencing Property include:

  • Case briefs, answers to the problems and discussion questions, exemplars for the skills exercises, and suggestions to encourage students to reflect upon the formation of their professional identity as they perform the skills exercises.
  • Suggested links to interesting videos on key cases.
  • Chapter-by-chapter student Study Guides that assist students in learning the vocabulary, organizing the legal rules, and synthesizing the material.
  • Formative assessment materials. These formative assessment materials include Jeopardy-like questions, multiple-choice questions, short-essay questions with model answers, and longer essay questions covering topics from multiple chapters with model answers.
  • Suggestions for integrating the author’s Developing Professional Skills: Property Interactive Lessons for additional practice in skills development.


The scope of coverage for Experiencing Property emphasizes the areas of Real Property Law covered by the NexGen Bar Exam:

  • Chapter 1 introduces Property Law through individual experiences and historical, cultural, and political perspectives.
  • Chapter 2 covers personal property.
  • Chapter 3 focuses on gratuitous transfers of property rights through gifts, intestate succession and the wealth-destroying effect of heirs’ property, estate planning, and adverse possession.
  • Chapter 4 explores landlord and tenant law and the societal problems of affordable housing and homelessness.
  • Chapter 5 explains present, future, and concurrent ownership rights, including the Uniform Partition of Heirs Property Act.
  • Chapter 6 covers real estate transactions and mortgage law principles.
  • Chapter 7 explains easements, restrictive covenants, and the legacy effects of racial restrictive covenants.
  • Chapter 8 introduces zoning law, explores the legacy effects of racial zoning and condemnation actions, and explores the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on governmental takings for public use.