Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Law
Are Beach Bondaries Enforceable? Real-Time Locational Uncertainty And The Right To Exclude, Josh Eagle
Are Beach Bondaries Enforceable? Real-Time Locational Uncertainty And The Right To Exclude, Josh Eagle
Washington Law Review
Over the past few decades, landowners have tried to use the First, Fourth, and Fifth Amendments to fully privatize the upper, dry-sand part of the beach. If these efforts were to succeed, there would be a host of negative consequences, and not just for surfers. In most states in which beaches are economically important, including California, Florida, New Jersey and Texas, privatized dry sand would have a significant impact on public access. This Article explores the possibility that courts and the public can put an end to the beach privatization movement simply by pointing to the common law of waterfront …
Fifty Shades Of Gray Infrastructure: Land Use And The Failure To Create Resilient Cities, Jonathan Rosenbloom
Fifty Shades Of Gray Infrastructure: Land Use And The Failure To Create Resilient Cities, Jonathan Rosenbloom
Washington Law Review
Land use laws, such as comprehensive plans, site plan reviews, zoning, and building codes, greatly affect community resilience to climate change. One often-overlooked area of land use law that is essential to community resilience is the regulation of infrastructure on private property. These regulations set standards for infrastructure built by private developers. Such infrastructure is completed in conjunction with millions of commercial and residential projects and is necessary for critical services, including potable water and energy distribution. Throughout the fifty states, these land use laws regulating infrastructure constructed by private developers encourage or compel “gray infrastructure.” Marked by human-made, engineered …
Response To Professor Rosenbloom: Fifty Shades Of Gray Infrastructure: Land Use And The Failure To Create Reslient Cities, 93 Wash. L. Rev. 317 (2018), Roberta F. Mann
Response To Professor Rosenbloom: Fifty Shades Of Gray Infrastructure: Land Use And The Failure To Create Reslient Cities, 93 Wash. L. Rev. 317 (2018), Roberta F. Mann
Washington Law Review Online
This piece is a response to Jonathan Rosenbloom, Fifty Shades of Gray Infrastructure: Land Use and The Failure to Create Resilient Cities, 93 Wash. L. Rev. 317 (2018).
Response To Professor Rosenbloom: Fifty Shades Of Gray Infrastructure: Land Use And The Failure To Create Reslient Cities, 93 Wash. L. Rev. 317 (2018), Roberta F. Mann
Response To Professor Rosenbloom: Fifty Shades Of Gray Infrastructure: Land Use And The Failure To Create Reslient Cities, 93 Wash. L. Rev. 317 (2018), Roberta F. Mann
Washington Law Review Online
This piece is a response to Jonathan Rosenbloom, Fifty Shades of Gray Infrastructure: Land Use and The Failure to Create Resilient Cities, 93 Wash. L. Rev. 317 (2018).