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Dukeminier & Krier's Property (w/ Connected eBook with Study Center)

  • Edition : 11th ed., 2026
  • Author(s) : Alexander, Strahilevitz,et al.

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    • ISBN: 9798894104867
    • SKU: 93002
    • Condition: New
    • Format: Hardcover/Access Code

    $348.48

    List Price: $363.00

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Jesse Dukeminier and Jim Krier’s trademark wit, passion, and human interest perspective has made Property one of the best—and best loved—casebooks of all time. A unique blend of authority and good humor, you’ll find a moveable feast of visual interest, compelling cases, and timely coverage of contemporary issues. In the Eleventh Edition, the authors have created a thoughtful and thorough revision, true to the spirit of the classic property text.

New to this Edition: 

  • Brand new chapter (Chapter 13) on property taxes as a tool of property regulation, featuring four new primary cases, historical materials, notes, and problems; there are many efforts around the country to reform property tax systems, and these materials—unique among property law casebooks—provide instructors with a way to address this pressing issue 
  • Review Problems after every chapter, with model answers provided for students in a substantially expanded Appendix 
  • Extensive coverage of the new Restatement (Fourth) of Property 
  • New and recent major adverse possession case laying out the requirements of the doctrine clearly for students; new and recent gift causa mortis case involving suicide (Chapter 2) 
  • New material and problems discussing effects of generative AI on intellectual property law; new primary case on the right of publicity for athletes whose avatars are used in video games; major new primary case involving trespass law, corner-crossing, and the relationship between private property and access to the public domain (Chapter 3) 
  • Extensive discussion of new empirical research on landlord-tenant law reforms and housing policy (Chapter 7) 
  • Revised section on the law of mortgages, including substantially bulked up discussion of mortgage regulation; new case on the post-2008 life of government sponsored entities operating in mortgage markets (Chapter 8) 
  • New primary case on title insurance and discussion of the most frequently litigated issues arising therefrom (Chapter 9) 
  • New materials on suggested changes to nuisance law in the proposed Restatement (Fourth) of Property; section on cases involving “non-physically invasive nuisances”; discussion of the interaction between nuisance and zoning (Chapter 10) 
  • New materials on conservation easements, common interest communities, “stale covenants,” state laws limiting the scope of covenants, and condo construction (Chapter 11) 
  • Revised section on the history of zoning; materials on the “quiet revolution” in land use in the 1970s; substantial engagement with the burgeoning economic literature on the effects of zoning—the most serious such discussion in any property law casebook; new section on recent zoning reforms around the country, including a primary case about a state constitutional challenge to zoning reforms (Chapter 12)