Elements of the public of Connecticut are engaged in direct conflict against private and municipal property rights over the issue of increased public access to beaches of the state. In Connecticut, as well as the nation, definite solutions to the problem are slow to materialize. The public\u27s right to the whole beach is being clarified by only a few states, while public access under common law remains a clouded issue nationwide. The research study I am proposing would examine in detail the legal issues involved, the state and federal legislative actions, geographical considerations, etc. I feel that the resulting collation of the issues and alternative solutions will assist the state planners and decision makers of Connecticut in reso...
The decline in the availability of public beach access is hypothesized to be a function of the lack ...
This comment examines the conflict between the public\u27s need for recreational access to the coast...
This casenote examines the tension between a local authority\u27s attempt to exercise its right of e...
Elements of the public of Connecticut are engaged in direct conflict against private and municipal p...
All the coastal states of the U.S., particularly the more populous, have been and are struggling wit...
In the United States today there exists a growing, mobile population who wish to make use of what is...
Before Brenden Leydon came along, the Town of Greenwich, Connecticut had an ordinance that banned ou...
Beaches are a natural resource ideally suited for public recreation. The public generally has a righ...
The shores of our oceans and Great Lakes have always carried an appeal to persons seeking escape fro...
Our nation faces a serious problem of congested recreational resources as a result of a rapid increa...
Extending beaches seaward by adding sand through replenishment projects has become a common strategy...
A discussion paper prepared as part of a series of focus groups on the topic of the Public Trust Doc...
Part I of this paper defines the traditional use of the beaches in the U.S. Virgin Islands and inclu...
In this article, the authors examine the various measures implemented by state and local governments...
While Maine boasts thousands of miles of coastline, only a small portion of the state\u27s beaches i...
The decline in the availability of public beach access is hypothesized to be a function of the lack ...
This comment examines the conflict between the public\u27s need for recreational access to the coast...
This casenote examines the tension between a local authority\u27s attempt to exercise its right of e...
Elements of the public of Connecticut are engaged in direct conflict against private and municipal p...
All the coastal states of the U.S., particularly the more populous, have been and are struggling wit...
In the United States today there exists a growing, mobile population who wish to make use of what is...
Before Brenden Leydon came along, the Town of Greenwich, Connecticut had an ordinance that banned ou...
Beaches are a natural resource ideally suited for public recreation. The public generally has a righ...
The shores of our oceans and Great Lakes have always carried an appeal to persons seeking escape fro...
Our nation faces a serious problem of congested recreational resources as a result of a rapid increa...
Extending beaches seaward by adding sand through replenishment projects has become a common strategy...
A discussion paper prepared as part of a series of focus groups on the topic of the Public Trust Doc...
Part I of this paper defines the traditional use of the beaches in the U.S. Virgin Islands and inclu...
In this article, the authors examine the various measures implemented by state and local governments...
While Maine boasts thousands of miles of coastline, only a small portion of the state\u27s beaches i...
The decline in the availability of public beach access is hypothesized to be a function of the lack ...
This comment examines the conflict between the public\u27s need for recreational access to the coast...
This casenote examines the tension between a local authority\u27s attempt to exercise its right of e...