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Why So Little Georgism in America?
Using the Pennsylvania Case Files to Understand the Slow, Uneven Progress of Land Value TaxationDocumentos de trabajoJulio 2006Mark Alan HughesPennsylvania is the only state government in the U.S. to enable split-rate property taxation among its local governments. Since 1913, Pennsylvania has produced a body of sustained outcomes across 33...
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From the President
Revista Land LinesAbril 2006Gregory K. IngramThe core competence of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy is the analysis of issues related to land, and ours is one of the few organizations in the world with this focus. The Institute’s current...
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Lincoln Institute of Land Policy Begins New Era
Comunicados de prensaDiciembre 14, 2006 -
Implementing a Local Property Tax Where There Is No Real Estate Market
The Case of Commonly Owned Land in Rural South AfricaLibrosAbril 2006Michael E. Bell and John H. BowmanSince 1995 the authors have worked on a series of property taxation projects in South Africa, funded in part by the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. South Africa envisions extending value-based...
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Who Pays the Property Tax?
Revista Land LinesAbril 2006George ZodrowA critical aspect of the property tax, but one that is rarely addressed in public debate, is its “economic incidence,” or who actually bears the burden of the tax, as opposed to its...
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Conservation Incentives in America's Heartland
Revista Land LinesOctubre 2006Inspired by the work of Aldo Leopold, conservation leaders explore three types of incentive programs to achieve land conservation in an economically efficient, measurably effective, and reasonably...
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London's Large-scale Regeneration Projects Offer Community Benefits
Revista Land LinesOctubre 2006Randy GraggModels of urban regeneration such as the Tate Modern and Canary Wharf lured the 2006 Loeb Fellows from Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design to London for their annual study trip,...