In what has been described as an emerging consensus and pejoratively labeled an elite liberaltarian consensus, there is growing scholarly recognition that land use overregulation is hurting the country by limiting the supply and increasing the price of housing. By highlighting state-level interventions that succeeded in checking local zoning authority, Professor Anika Lemar\u27s article makes a valuable contribution to the fight against excessive zoning limitations
The conventional wisdom is that New York\u27s failure to adopt a comprehensive state-wide land use s...
Due to a remarkable convergence of criticisms from both the right and the left, zoning is under more...
The state legislature’s decision to leave the creation of affordable housing to New York’s local gov...
Commentators have long decried the pernicious effects that overly restrictive land use regulations, ...
Housing costs in major coastal metropolitan areas nationwide have skyrocketed, impacting people, the...
This article is devoted to an examination of local land use regulation in the context of the use of ...
One can now convincingly demonstrate that less government would result in more house at less cost. M...
Land use control in America has always been an intensely local area of the law. Modem land use law, ...
Two vexing puzzles plague American land use regulators. The first puzzle is how to protect property ...
Generations of scholarship on the political economy of land use have tried to explain a world in whi...
Thirty-seven years ago, a book called The Quiet Revolution in Land Use Control argued that states wo...
It has been roughly a century since early advocates of zoning took notice of how crowded and congest...
The year 1967 begins the second half-century of zoning in the United States. The first comprehensive...
For the past century, property rights-and in particular development rights-have been circumscribed a...
Over thirty years ago The United States Court of Appeals upheld municipal efforts to control growth ...
The conventional wisdom is that New York\u27s failure to adopt a comprehensive state-wide land use s...
Due to a remarkable convergence of criticisms from both the right and the left, zoning is under more...
The state legislature’s decision to leave the creation of affordable housing to New York’s local gov...
Commentators have long decried the pernicious effects that overly restrictive land use regulations, ...
Housing costs in major coastal metropolitan areas nationwide have skyrocketed, impacting people, the...
This article is devoted to an examination of local land use regulation in the context of the use of ...
One can now convincingly demonstrate that less government would result in more house at less cost. M...
Land use control in America has always been an intensely local area of the law. Modem land use law, ...
Two vexing puzzles plague American land use regulators. The first puzzle is how to protect property ...
Generations of scholarship on the political economy of land use have tried to explain a world in whi...
Thirty-seven years ago, a book called The Quiet Revolution in Land Use Control argued that states wo...
It has been roughly a century since early advocates of zoning took notice of how crowded and congest...
The year 1967 begins the second half-century of zoning in the United States. The first comprehensive...
For the past century, property rights-and in particular development rights-have been circumscribed a...
Over thirty years ago The United States Court of Appeals upheld municipal efforts to control growth ...
The conventional wisdom is that New York\u27s failure to adopt a comprehensive state-wide land use s...
Due to a remarkable convergence of criticisms from both the right and the left, zoning is under more...
The state legislature’s decision to leave the creation of affordable housing to New York’s local gov...