This article, published in the Vanderbilt Law Review, uses a New Jersey court case?In re Adoption of the 2003 Low Income Housing Tax Credit Qualified Allocation?to illustrate the tension between the FHA and the siting preferences in the LIHTC statute. It highlights a deep legal and philosophical contradiction in the United States between civil rights guarantees?particularly the duty to affirmatively further fair housing?and state and federal low-income housing policy
The Constitution contains two clauses that protect persons against governmental interference with th...
This Article empirically debunks the common claim that homeowners insurance policies do not vary acr...
In 1997, seventeen poor rural school districts in New Jersey filed a lawsuit seeking a declaration t...
A growing national debate about the future of race, housing, and urban policy in the United States i...
Restrictive land use regulation has thwarted the upward mobility of many Americans, particularly Ame...
Thousands of American cities and towns are responding to social problems like bullying, drug abuse...
Fifty-two years ago, Congress enacted a one-of-a-kind civil rights directive. It requires every fede...
INTRODUCTION I. THE SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF TAX-BASED HOUSING SUBSIDIES A.WHY THE SPATIAL DISTRIBUTI...
This article analyzes the implications of the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Hall Street ...
One simplified view of contract law is that the state enforces private bargains without looking into...
An enduring challenge for administrative law is the tension between the ideal of democratic policyma...
Following the Civil War, black Americans began acquiring land in earnest; by 1920 almost one million...
This introductory section describes how section 253 works, and notes that the importance of local ri...
The distinction between property rules and liability rules has revolutionized our understanding of m...
The Delaware Supreme Court’s opinions in Weinberger and Technicolor have left a troublesome uncertai...
The Constitution contains two clauses that protect persons against governmental interference with th...
This Article empirically debunks the common claim that homeowners insurance policies do not vary acr...
In 1997, seventeen poor rural school districts in New Jersey filed a lawsuit seeking a declaration t...
A growing national debate about the future of race, housing, and urban policy in the United States i...
Restrictive land use regulation has thwarted the upward mobility of many Americans, particularly Ame...
Thousands of American cities and towns are responding to social problems like bullying, drug abuse...
Fifty-two years ago, Congress enacted a one-of-a-kind civil rights directive. It requires every fede...
INTRODUCTION I. THE SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF TAX-BASED HOUSING SUBSIDIES A.WHY THE SPATIAL DISTRIBUTI...
This article analyzes the implications of the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Hall Street ...
One simplified view of contract law is that the state enforces private bargains without looking into...
An enduring challenge for administrative law is the tension between the ideal of democratic policyma...
Following the Civil War, black Americans began acquiring land in earnest; by 1920 almost one million...
This introductory section describes how section 253 works, and notes that the importance of local ri...
The distinction between property rules and liability rules has revolutionized our understanding of m...
The Delaware Supreme Court’s opinions in Weinberger and Technicolor have left a troublesome uncertai...
The Constitution contains two clauses that protect persons against governmental interference with th...
This Article empirically debunks the common claim that homeowners insurance policies do not vary acr...
In 1997, seventeen poor rural school districts in New Jersey filed a lawsuit seeking a declaration t...