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Full-Text Articles in Law
Recent Developments In U.S. Eminent Domain Law, Joyce Palomar
Recent Developments In U.S. Eminent Domain Law, Joyce Palomar
Joyce Palomar
No abstract provided.
Empower The Neighborhood And Save The City; Why Courts Should Permit Neighborhood Control Of Zoning, Kenneth A. Stahl
Empower The Neighborhood And Save The City; Why Courts Should Permit Neighborhood Control Of Zoning, Kenneth A. Stahl
Kenneth Stahl
Whether cities should delegate zoning authority to neighborhood groups is one of the most hotly contested issues in municipal politics, yet it is also essentially a moot point. Since a bizarre series of Supreme Court cases in the early twentieth century, it has been largely settled that cities may not constitutionally delegate the zoning power to sub-municipal groups, at least where the power is delegated specifically to landowners in a certain proximity to a proposed land use change.
This article argues that courts have erred in prohibiting cities from devolving zoning control to proximate landowners, a scheme I designate a …
Sprawl In Canada And The United States (Powerpoint), Michael E. Lewyn
Sprawl In Canada And The United States (Powerpoint), Michael E. Lewyn
Michael E Lewyn
PowerPoints for a speech explaining that sprawl in Canada is (1) less extensive than in the USA and (2) caused partially by government regulation.
Strategic Spillovers, Daniel B. Kelly
Strategic Spillovers, Daniel B. Kelly
Daniel B Kelly
The traditional problem with externalities is well known: self-interested individuals and profit-maximizing firms often generate harm as an unintended byproduct of their use of property. I examine situations in which individuals and firms purposely seek to generate harm, in order to extract payments in exchange for desisting. Situations involving such “strategic spillovers” have received relatively little systematic attention, but the underlying problem is a perennial one. From the “livery stable scam” in Chicago during the nineteenth century to “pollution entrepreneurs” in China in the twenty-first century, various parties have an incentive to engage in externality-generating activities they otherwise would not …
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform And Consumer Protection Act: What Caused The Financial Crisis And Will Dodd-Frank Succeed In Preventing Future Crises?, Charles W. Murdock
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform And Consumer Protection Act: What Caused The Financial Crisis And Will Dodd-Frank Succeed In Preventing Future Crises?, Charles W. Murdock
Charles W. Murdock
Summary: The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act: What Caused the Financial Crisis and Will Dodd-Frank Succeed in Preventing Future Crises?
We are still experiencing the devastating impact of the financial crisis which came to a head on September 18, 2008 when Secretary Paulson told Congressional leaders that “[u]nless you act, the financial system of this country and the world will melt down in a matter of days.”
To prevent future crises of this magnitude, last year Congress enacted the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. However, this year, legislation has already been introduced to repeal …
The Due Process Rights Of Residential Tenants In Mortgage Foreclosure Cases, Henry Rose
The Due Process Rights Of Residential Tenants In Mortgage Foreclosure Cases, Henry Rose
Henry Rose
The Due Process Rights of Residential Tenants in Mortgage Foreclosure Cases
(Abstract)
A group who have been hard hit by the recent mortgage foreclosure crisis in the United States are residential tenants. It is estimated that forty percent of the households who have been displaced by mortgage foreclosures are tenants.
Some tenants have been evicted from their homes without notice pursuant to foreclosures of the mortgages on the buildings where they reside. In states which require judicial supervision of mortgage foreclosures, it likely violates basic principles of procedural Due Process for tenants to be evicted without notice. In states that …
The Judicial Invention Of Property Norms: Ellickson’S Whalemen Revistited, Robert C. Deal
The Judicial Invention Of Property Norms: Ellickson’S Whalemen Revistited, Robert C. Deal
Robert Deal
Robert C. Ellickson has argued that whalemen developed norms to settle arguments over contested whales. These norms, Ellickson explained, were largely adopted by courts as the property law of whaling. Ellickson’s point is that whaling norms “did not mimic law; they created law.” Ellickson is certainly correct that the close-knit community of nineteenth century American whalemen managed to settle disputes in ways which maximized group welfare. What Ellickson has failed to recognize is that that the means by which whalemen resolved disputes without violence or frequent involvement of courts was built not upon widely accepted norms, but rather upon the …