日治時期台灣社會對近代國家制度的調適─土地共有制度之研究
Date Issued
2005-07-31
Date
2005-07-31
Author(s)
DOI
932414H002018H6
Abstract
This paper analyzes why in Ching Dynasty, even after the division of family assets,
family members still held common assets to establish worship corporates. Our cost and
benefit analysis points out that the worship corporate actually benefited the live as well
as the dead. Due to the high cost to manage common assets, worship corporates were
established only infrequently. And the data suggested that its establishment was very
often a response to clan fights.
Subjects
commonsL
property right
Publisher
臺北市:國立臺灣大學經濟學系暨研究所
Type
report
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932414H002018H6.pdf
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Format
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(MD5):b9bb99dfa302786f2f65bf5dccef9a69
