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Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Law
A Dialogue On Design, William A. Mcdonough
A Dialogue On Design, William A. Mcdonough
University of Richmond Law Review
This is an interview in the Allen Chair Symposium.
The Twilight Of Land-Use Controls: A Paradigm Shift?, Charles M. Haar
The Twilight Of Land-Use Controls: A Paradigm Shift?, Charles M. Haar
University of Richmond Law Review
The subject chosen for this discussion is both timely and thought-provoking: the status and future of land-use regulations in the United States. In the hope of making the issues subsumed under this title as exciting to the general public as they are to the practitioners, Professor Michael Allan Wolf has taken the monumental Euclid decision of the United States Supreme Court in 1926 as the pivot of our deliberations. He has posed the question most dramatically with overtones of a swelling Wagnerian overture: "Is It The Twilight of Environmental and Land-Use Regulation?"
Transportation Conformity And Land-Use Planning: Understanding The Inconsistencies, D. Brennen Keene
Transportation Conformity And Land-Use Planning: Understanding The Inconsistencies, D. Brennen Keene
University of Richmond Law Review
Since the boom of federal environmental laws in the early 1970s, Congress, federal administrative agencies, and the states have grappled with how best to obtain the lofty goals of these laws. As evidence of this struggle, Congress has made substantial amendments to several major environmental laws on one or more occasions in order to achieve these goals, and the states have followed suit in order to keep pace with the changes on the federal level. The resulting mass of state and federal environmental laws and regulations has led to a series of complex, and often confusing, layers of laws and …
Suburbs Under Siege: Race, Space And Audacious Judges, Abigail T. Baker
Suburbs Under Siege: Race, Space And Audacious Judges, Abigail T. Baker
University of Richmond Law Review
Across the United States, cities are witnessing a mass exodus into the suburbs with increasing frequency. The prestige that once attached to urbanites is now equated with these "new suburbanites." Claiming better schools, safer neighborhoods and overall peace of mind, the new suburbanites have been the pied-piper to thousands of other city dwellers. By and large, those that have been able to afford to move out of the cities are white, middle-class Americans.6 Local exclusionary zoning, by permitting only certain types of homes to be built in a specific area, has rendered the American dream-owning a home in suburbia-unattainable for …
Capture And Counteraction: Self-Help By Environmental Zealots, James E. Krier
Capture And Counteraction: Self-Help By Environmental Zealots, James E. Krier
University of Richmond Law Review
Self-help is a largely neglected topic in American legal studies. With the exception of a survey by a group of law students published a dozen years ago, there appears to be little, if anything, in our legal literature that confronts the subject in a systematic way. This is so, at least, if one defines self-help as I do. To me, the term refers to any act of bypassing the formal legal system in order to get what one wants.
Life, Liberty & Whose Property?: An Essay On Property Rights, Loren A. Smith
Life, Liberty & Whose Property?: An Essay On Property Rights, Loren A. Smith
University of Richmond Law Review
This essay explores the place that the concept of property rights occupies in our constitutional system. The word "property" has been used in a number of ways in the history of our Republic.
Takings In The Court Of Federal Claims: Does The Court Make Takings Policy In Hage?, Danielle M. Stager
Takings In The Court Of Federal Claims: Does The Court Make Takings Policy In Hage?, Danielle M. Stager
University of Richmond Law Review
In the eleven western states, almost half of the land is federally owned and a large percentage of that federal land is used for grazing privately-owned domestic livestock. The Department of the Interior estimates that permitted grazing occurs on thirty-six percent of federal land, but this percentage is much higher in the areas containing more federal rangeland. In 1990, the eleven western states had approximately seventeen million beef cattle and 102,800 beef producers. Roughly eighteen percent of those beef producers had federal grazing permits, but in some states that percentage was much higher. For example, eighty-eight percent of the cattle …