As 2016’s national election made clear, striking ideological differences between cities and their surrounding states exist in many parts of the country. One way this divide is manifesting itself is in state governments passing laws with the sole purpose of outlawing particular local conduct. For instance, recent state legislation has prohibited local governments from establishing a minimum wage, from prohibiting the use of plastic bags, and from protecting the rights of transgender individuals to use the bathroom of their identified gender. These state actions do not create substantive law; instead, they merely curtail the grant of authority—known, broadly speaking, as home rule—to municipalities. State override of local action in this wa...
The conventional wisdom is that New York\u27s failure to adopt a comprehensive state-wide land use s...
This Article is about “local power.” We use that term in two distinct but complementary ways. First,...
Thirty-seven years ago, a book called The Quiet Revolution in Land Use Control argued that states wo...
As 2016’s national election made clear, striking ideological differences between cities and their su...
This Article explains the role that local governments have assumed in protecting the environment, ex...
While the authority of municipalities to partake in land use decisions is a well-established concept...
In recent years, state legislatures have increasingly passed laws that prohibit or preempt local act...
In this paper, Professor Philip Weinberg examines the relationships between local and state governme...
There has been comparatively little exploration of the importance of local government in addressing ...
Local governments have recently expanded their efforts to abate pollution problems. The constitution...
Due, in part, to Justice Brandeis\u27 famous dissent, many have presumed that the states are the mos...
Conflicts over “sanctuary” cities, minimum wage laws, and gender-neutral bathrooms have brought the ...
In recent years there has been a movement in academia from studying environmental policy on the nati...
The scope of environmental law extends beyond the federal statutes most people associate with protec...
This article examines the challenges presented by the complexity of environmental laws at the local ...
The conventional wisdom is that New York\u27s failure to adopt a comprehensive state-wide land use s...
This Article is about “local power.” We use that term in two distinct but complementary ways. First,...
Thirty-seven years ago, a book called The Quiet Revolution in Land Use Control argued that states wo...
As 2016’s national election made clear, striking ideological differences between cities and their su...
This Article explains the role that local governments have assumed in protecting the environment, ex...
While the authority of municipalities to partake in land use decisions is a well-established concept...
In recent years, state legislatures have increasingly passed laws that prohibit or preempt local act...
In this paper, Professor Philip Weinberg examines the relationships between local and state governme...
There has been comparatively little exploration of the importance of local government in addressing ...
Local governments have recently expanded their efforts to abate pollution problems. The constitution...
Due, in part, to Justice Brandeis\u27 famous dissent, many have presumed that the states are the mos...
Conflicts over “sanctuary” cities, minimum wage laws, and gender-neutral bathrooms have brought the ...
In recent years there has been a movement in academia from studying environmental policy on the nati...
The scope of environmental law extends beyond the federal statutes most people associate with protec...
This article examines the challenges presented by the complexity of environmental laws at the local ...
The conventional wisdom is that New York\u27s failure to adopt a comprehensive state-wide land use s...
This Article is about “local power.” We use that term in two distinct but complementary ways. First,...
Thirty-seven years ago, a book called The Quiet Revolution in Land Use Control argued that states wo...