Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Florida Law Review
Abstract
The boundaries between land parcels usually are assumed to be static and unchanging. However, not all land borders are stable. An important land boundary that routinely ambulates is the border between what is publicly and privately owned along U.S. coastal shores. This coastal boundary recently has been the subject of renewed attention from the courts, scholars, and even the popular press in the wake of Hurricane Sandy. This Article offers an economic analysis of why the boundary generally ambulates, rather than remaining perpetually fixed as land borders usually are assumed to do. It also considers whether the legal border generally should continue to migrate in an era of sea level rise due to climate change.
First Page
1957
Volume
65
Publication Date
2013
Recommended Citation
Katrina M. Wyman & Nicholas R. Williams,
Migrating Boundaries,
65
Florida Law Review
1957
(2013).
Available at:
https://gretchen.law.nyu.edu/fac-articles/1500
