Local communities often suffer when residents have too small a stake in their homes-a point underscored by recent rashes of foreclosures and abandonments, and implicated by longstanding questions about the effects on communities of renters and owner-occupants, respectively. However, homeowners with too great a financial stake in their homes can also cause difficulties for local governance by acting as risk-averse NIMBYs. Local governments should have a strong interest in helping members of their communities move away from problematic forms of stakeholding and toward more desirable intermediate positions. This Article examines how and why governmental entities at the state and local levels might regulate or shape the financial stakes that re...
Secured credit in homes has been divided and over-divided and spun into so many separate interests t...
Property laws have far-reaching implications for the way people live and the opportunities they and ...
Proponents of robust mortgage finance regulation would do well to look to the states, and specifical...
Local communities often suffer when residents have too small a stake in their homes—a point undersco...
Local governments commonly respond to economic and social pressures on property by using their legal...
Municipalities from the Central Valley in California to Upstate New York bear the legacy of reckless...
So many things have gone wrong with our housing market that it is hard to know where to start. One s...
The revered status of American homeownership has deep and seemingly impenetrable roots. In our moder...
In this article, we examine the role of investors and occupant-owners in an urban context during the...
Foreclosures are at a record high, causing families to be displaced, blighted neighborhoods and the ...
The 2008 Financial Crisis and the ensuing Great Recession sent shockwaves throughout the U.S. and gl...
Predatory lending is heavily concentrated in low- and moderate-income neighborhoods and disproportio...
Housing costs in major coastal metropolitan areas nationwide have skyrocketed, impacting people, the...
This Article explores one possible private law prescription that may help common-interest communitie...
For decades, America’s older, undercrowded cities have struggled with neighborhoods beset by vacant ...
Secured credit in homes has been divided and over-divided and spun into so many separate interests t...
Property laws have far-reaching implications for the way people live and the opportunities they and ...
Proponents of robust mortgage finance regulation would do well to look to the states, and specifical...
Local communities often suffer when residents have too small a stake in their homes—a point undersco...
Local governments commonly respond to economic and social pressures on property by using their legal...
Municipalities from the Central Valley in California to Upstate New York bear the legacy of reckless...
So many things have gone wrong with our housing market that it is hard to know where to start. One s...
The revered status of American homeownership has deep and seemingly impenetrable roots. In our moder...
In this article, we examine the role of investors and occupant-owners in an urban context during the...
Foreclosures are at a record high, causing families to be displaced, blighted neighborhoods and the ...
The 2008 Financial Crisis and the ensuing Great Recession sent shockwaves throughout the U.S. and gl...
Predatory lending is heavily concentrated in low- and moderate-income neighborhoods and disproportio...
Housing costs in major coastal metropolitan areas nationwide have skyrocketed, impacting people, the...
This Article explores one possible private law prescription that may help common-interest communitie...
For decades, America’s older, undercrowded cities have struggled with neighborhoods beset by vacant ...
Secured credit in homes has been divided and over-divided and spun into so many separate interests t...
Property laws have far-reaching implications for the way people live and the opportunities they and ...
Proponents of robust mortgage finance regulation would do well to look to the states, and specifical...