Professor David Callies notes two significant trends since the Quiet Revolution and The Taking Issue were written in the early 1970\u27s: (1) local land use controls have not withered away and many local governments are increasingly able to regulate the use of land through better plans and planning, and more sophisticated local ordinances (including environmental controls); (2) federal courts have reentered the regulatory takings arena, striking down several regional and state-wide land use controls on constitutional grounds. For both reasons, he suggests that local land use controls are an excellent arena to regulate development of all but the truly state-wide or regional variety. He uses examples from Hawaii, Oregon and Florida
People normally perceive environmental law to be a piecemeal of federal laws mostly concerned with t...
Professor Wolf suggests that there is a brooding omnipresence over local government efforts to prote...
This Article examines how well federal agencies and local governments are collaborating in land use ...
Thirty-seven years ago, a book called The Quiet Revolution in Land Use Control argued that states wo...
This Article offers an examination of the federal role in land use planning and regulation set in th...
Thirty-seven years ago, a book called The Quiet Revolution in Land Use Control argued that states wo...
This Article offers an examination of the federal role in land use planning and regulation set in th...
The "Quiet Revolution" is a name popularly applied to the bundle of innovative land use controls dev...
This article describes how the American land use system has evolved to address recent environmental ...
This article describes how the American land use system has evolved to address recent environmental ...
This Essay identifies four common elements in the many ad hoc efforts currently being pursued. These...
Land use control in America has always been an intensely local area of the law. Modem land use law, ...
Many local officials have the misguided belief that their utilization of land use regulation is grea...
Many local officials have the misguided belief that their utilization of land use regulation is grea...
This Article explores the prospects of achieving policy coherence in the field of land use regulatio...
People normally perceive environmental law to be a piecemeal of federal laws mostly concerned with t...
Professor Wolf suggests that there is a brooding omnipresence over local government efforts to prote...
This Article examines how well federal agencies and local governments are collaborating in land use ...
Thirty-seven years ago, a book called The Quiet Revolution in Land Use Control argued that states wo...
This Article offers an examination of the federal role in land use planning and regulation set in th...
Thirty-seven years ago, a book called The Quiet Revolution in Land Use Control argued that states wo...
This Article offers an examination of the federal role in land use planning and regulation set in th...
The "Quiet Revolution" is a name popularly applied to the bundle of innovative land use controls dev...
This article describes how the American land use system has evolved to address recent environmental ...
This article describes how the American land use system has evolved to address recent environmental ...
This Essay identifies four common elements in the many ad hoc efforts currently being pursued. These...
Land use control in America has always been an intensely local area of the law. Modem land use law, ...
Many local officials have the misguided belief that their utilization of land use regulation is grea...
Many local officials have the misguided belief that their utilization of land use regulation is grea...
This Article explores the prospects of achieving policy coherence in the field of land use regulatio...
People normally perceive environmental law to be a piecemeal of federal laws mostly concerned with t...
Professor Wolf suggests that there is a brooding omnipresence over local government efforts to prote...
This Article examines how well federal agencies and local governments are collaborating in land use ...