After nearly four decades of school finance litigation, with numerous plaintiff victories based on state constitutional law doctrines of equality and adequacy, subsequent generations of lawsuits reveal that the earlier court decrees have not eliminated sustained inequality and inadequacy in public schools. This disappointing state of affairs, when coupled with the fact that a growing number of state courts are increasingly reluctant to take on the merits of school finance cases, suggests that the future trajectory of school finance and school finance litigation is not positive. In this Article, I suggest that both of these negative trends are at least partially explained by the fact that in the overwhelming majority of cases, courts have no...
Most state constitutions recognize a right to education, but courts have been hard pressed to respon...
Neither race nor class alone can predict educational achievement. However, in America, disparities i...
Since the early 1970s, state court litigation has been brought in forty-six of the fifty states, wit...
After nearly four decades of school finance litigation, with numerous plaintiff victories based on s...
This Note looks at the various ways states fund public education. Then the Note examines the how the...
Public school funding plummeted following the Great Recession and failed to recover over the next de...
In this Article, Dean Underwood explains that school finance cases can be divided into three waves o...
Since 1968 suits have been filed in at least ten states alleging that public school financing system...
On August 31, 1971, the California Supreme Court, in Serrano v. Priest tentatively concluded that Ca...
The public education system in the United States fails to educate economically disadvantaged childre...
For the past three decades, plaintiffs in hundreds of state and federal court lawsuits have challeng...
American reformers have long been concerned by substantial differences in the money and resources av...
Recently, state systems of financing public education have been overturned or seriously threatened b...
In May 2010, a coalition of California students, parents, and school districts filed a ground-breaki...
This Article examines how the landscape of school funding litigation has changed over the three deca...
Most state constitutions recognize a right to education, but courts have been hard pressed to respon...
Neither race nor class alone can predict educational achievement. However, in America, disparities i...
Since the early 1970s, state court litigation has been brought in forty-six of the fifty states, wit...
After nearly four decades of school finance litigation, with numerous plaintiff victories based on s...
This Note looks at the various ways states fund public education. Then the Note examines the how the...
Public school funding plummeted following the Great Recession and failed to recover over the next de...
In this Article, Dean Underwood explains that school finance cases can be divided into three waves o...
Since 1968 suits have been filed in at least ten states alleging that public school financing system...
On August 31, 1971, the California Supreme Court, in Serrano v. Priest tentatively concluded that Ca...
The public education system in the United States fails to educate economically disadvantaged childre...
For the past three decades, plaintiffs in hundreds of state and federal court lawsuits have challeng...
American reformers have long been concerned by substantial differences in the money and resources av...
Recently, state systems of financing public education have been overturned or seriously threatened b...
In May 2010, a coalition of California students, parents, and school districts filed a ground-breaki...
This Article examines how the landscape of school funding litigation has changed over the three deca...
Most state constitutions recognize a right to education, but courts have been hard pressed to respon...
Neither race nor class alone can predict educational achievement. However, in America, disparities i...
Since the early 1970s, state court litigation has been brought in forty-six of the fifty states, wit...