Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference 2026

Schedule

Wed, 14 Oct, 2026 at 06:30 pm to Fri, 16 Oct, 2026 at 10:00 pm

UTC+01:00
Location

No.11 Cavendish Square | London, EN

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The Annual Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference will take place on October 14-16th, 2026.
About this Event

The Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference is hosted by William & Mary Law School in partnership with Queen Mary, Unversity of London School of Law. This conference is the premier U.S.A. gathering of property experts from the legal academy and the practicing bar. Throughout the conference and at the Award dinner we will honor James Penner, recipient of the 2026 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Prize.


06:00 PM


Welcome Reception

Held at the Terrace Pavilion, House of Commons, Palace of Westminster.

08:00 AM - 05:00 PM


Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference Day 1

The official conference will be hosted at No.11 Cavendish Square which is situated in the heart of London's West End. They are within easy walking distance of Oxford Circus and Bond Street stations. No.11 Cavendish Square, London W1G 0AN

08:00 AM - 05:00 PM


Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference Day 2

No.11 Cavendish Square is situated in the heart of London's West End. We are within easy walking distance of Oxford Circus and Bond Street stations. No.11 Cavendish Square, London W1G 0AN

06:00 PM - 10:00 PM


Brigham-Kanner Prize Reception & Dinner

It will be held at the Old Hall of Lincoln's Inn. There will be a cocktail reception from 6 - 7 PM with dinner to follow. During the dinner, Professor James Penner will be awarded the Brigham-Kanner Property Rights prize. Lincoln’s Inn is an eleven-acre estate located in central London. The main entrance to the estate is located off Lincoln’s Inn Fields at the junction with Newman’s Row and Serle Street (Postcode: WC2A 3QA) The estate is conveniently located only a short walk from either Holborn or Chancery Lane tube stations.



Session 1
The Concept of Property: A Tribute to James Penner

This panel celebrates the work of James Penner, recipient of the 2026 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Prize, whose scholarship has reshaped contemporary understanding of the nature and structure of property. The panel will explore major contributions and themes in Penner’s work, including separable “things,” exclusionary norms, and the bundle-of-rights debate, as well as the connections between conceptual, doctrinal, practical, and philosophical approaches to property law.

Session 2
Property, Human Rights, and International Law

Bringing together scholars and practitioners working across these fields, this panel will examine how property rights are recognized, limited, and contested in international and transnational contexts, including through human rights frameworks and investment law regimes, as well as the mediation of property disputes between nation-states. Discussion will address questions about the status of property as a human right, the relationship between property protections and state regulatory authority, and the role of international law in shaping domestic property systems. The panel will also consider tensions between private ownership, public interests, and distributive concerns in a global setting.

Session 3
Other People's Things: Trusts, Entities, and Fiduciaries in Property

This panel examines forms of ownership in which control and benefit are divided across persons, from private trusts to corporate and charitable entities. The discussion will showcase current debates in fiduciary law, and the significance of the wider set of questions they present for our understanding of property and ownership. The panel will also address the conceptual and practical implications of separating legal and beneficial interests across different institutional settings.

Session 4
Roman, English, and Other Legacies: The Role of History in Property Law

More than other areas of basic private law, property draws upon and reflects historical sources and practices in a wide range of contexts and applications. This panel will explore how and why historical considerations shape contemporary property law. Discussion will address the uses and limits of historical analysis in property theory and doctrine, including questions about continuity, adaptation, and divergence. The panel will also consider how appeals to history inform present-day debates about ownership, authority, and the evolution of property institutions.

Session 5
Intangible Property in an Interconnected World

This panel examines how legal regimes governing intellectual property, digital assets, and other non-physical ownable assets operate across borders, and the extent to which globalization complicates or reshapes traditional territorial assumptions. Discussion will address questions about jurisdiction, enforcement, and regulatory coordination, as well as the tension between claims of a “borderless” digital environment and the continuing role of nation-states and their subdivisions in defining and protecting property rights. The panel will also consider how emerging technologies and transnational markets are transforming the structure and scope of intangible property.

Session 6
Comparative Perspectives on Compensation for Government Takings

This panel explores how different legal systems approach compensation for government expropriation of private property, focusing in particular on English, American, and Canadian law. It will examine when compensation is required, how it is measured, and how doctrines vary across jurisdictions and institutional settings, as well as differences in more general attitudes and institutional approaches to property protection. The panel will also consider what comparative experience reveals about the purposes of compensation and the relative advantages and disadvantages of varying strategies for securing property rights.

Session 7
Of Locke, Bentham, and Blackstone: English Contributions to Property’s Philosophical Foundations

This panel will discuss normative justifications for property law, with a special emphasis on the contributions of major English theorists. It will explore how themes of labor, productivity, security, and legal order have shaped enduring understandings of ownership and its moral underpinnings. The discussion will consider the continuing influence of writers like Locke, Bentham, and Blackstone on contemporary property theory, as well as the tensions among their approaches.


Agenda

🕑: 06:00 PM
Welcome Reception

Info: Held at the Terrace Pavilion, House of Commons, Palace of Westminster.


🕑: 08:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference Day 1

Info: The official conference will be hosted at No.11 Cavendish Square which is situated in the heart of London's West End. They are within easy walking distance of Oxford Circus and Bond Street stations.

No.11 Cavendish Square,
London W1G 0AN


🕑: 08:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference Day 2

Info: No.11 Cavendish Square is situated in the heart of London's West End. We are within easy walking distance of Oxford Circus and Bond Street stations.

No.11 Cavendish Square,
London W1G 0AN


🕑: 06:00 PM - 10:00 PM
Brigham-Kanner Prize Reception & Dinner

Info: It will be held at the Old Hall of Lincoln's Inn. There will be a cocktail reception from 6 - 7 PM with dinner to follow.  During the dinner, Professor James Penner will be awarded the Brigham-Kanner Property Rights prize.  Lincoln’s Inn is an eleven-acre estate located in central London. The main entrance to the estate is located off Lincoln’s Inn Fields at the junction with Newman’s Row and Serle Street (Postcode: WC2A 3QA)

The estate is conveniently located only a short walk from either Holborn or Chancery Lane tube stations.


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Where is it happening?

No.11 Cavendish Square, 11 Cavendish Square, London, United Kingdom

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Tickets

USD 321.96 to USD 1335.68

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