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Full-Text Articles in Land Use Law
Murr And Wisconsin: The Badger State's Take On Regulatory Takings
Murr And Wisconsin: The Badger State's Take On Regulatory Takings
Marquette Law Review
None.
The Supreme Court's Land Use Decisions, Hon. Leon D. Lazer
The Supreme Court's Land Use Decisions, Hon. Leon D. Lazer
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Growth Management Revolution In Washington: Past, Present, And Future, Richard L. Settle, Charles G. Gavigan
The Growth Management Revolution In Washington: Past, Present, And Future, Richard L. Settle, Charles G. Gavigan
Seattle University Law Review
Since near misses nearly twenty years ago, comprehensive reform of Washington land use regulatory legislation has been simmering on the back burner. In 1989, the pot began to boil. Central Puget Sound area motorists fumed in "gridlock" traffic. They denounced dense, downtown development, fretted over soaring housing prices, and lamented the loss of forests, farms, and salmon-spawning streams. Thus, the growth management revolution was fomented not by the poor and downtrodden, nor by academic theorists, but by the middle-class suburban masses who sensed escalating degradation of community, environment, and quality of life. They demanded change. The revolutionary battles were fought …
Guidance For Growth: A Symposium On Washington State's Growth Management Act, Kimberly L. Deasy, Brian L. Holtzclaw
Guidance For Growth: A Symposium On Washington State's Growth Management Act, Kimberly L. Deasy, Brian L. Holtzclaw
Seattle University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Growth Management In The 1980s: A New Consensus And A Change Of Strategy, Susan M. Sinclair
Growth Management In The 1980s: A New Consensus And A Change Of Strategy, Susan M. Sinclair
New England Journal of Public Policy
After a decade of relative silence on the issue of land use planning, legislatures in several states are reassessing the relative roles of state and local governments in the management of growth and development. When state governments first addressed the land use issue in the late 1960s and the early 1970s, environmental concerns dominated the debate. During this period a number of states established regulatory mechanisms for bringing certain kinds of development under state review. During the late 1970s and early 1980s there was a hiatus in state-level activity on land use issues. Since 1985, however, the issue has reemerged …