The U.S. Supreme Court has difficulty determining when a regulation is so excessive as to amount to an unconstitutional taking under the Fifth Amendment. In making that determination, the Court has failed to deploy an investment-backed expectations analysis as a normative guide, even though the concept is part of at least one constitutional test. Nevertheless, the Court\u27s focus on principles of fairness and justice suggests that the original, conceptual formulation of investment- backed expectations comports with the Court\u27s normative takings philosophy. Using the extreme situation where a regulation completely eliminates a property\u27s value as an analytical example, this Note argues that the Court should expressly adopt an eff...
Just compensation for future interests should be directly responsive to the Fifth Amendment by direc...
Constitutional takings protections, such as those in the Fifth Amendment of the United States Consti...
There is probably no area of law that is as fraught with confusion and inconsistencies as the regula...
The U.S. Supreme Court has difficulty determining when a regulation is so excessive as to amount to ...
Constitutional protection of private property is grounded in a conflict between two legal principles...
This Article will examine the "fairness" dimension of takings jurisprudence from both the macro and ...
In the American constitutional system the sovereign has the power to enact “regulations which are ne...
Supreme Court decisions over the last three-quarters of a century have turned the words of the Takin...
Section I briefly discusses the basic principles of takings law as enunciated by prior cases, as wel...
In United States v. Armstrong, the Supreme Court stated that the Fifth Amendment Takings Clause “was...
This article revisits and examines whether the fairness and justice doctrine of Armstrong v. United ...
For the past forty years, the United States Supreme Court has embraced the doctrine of regulatory ta...
The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment prohibits the federal government from taking property fo...
The thesis of this Article is that the Court of Federal Claims and the Court of Appeals for the Fede...
For almost thirty-five years, the U.S. Supreme Court has attempted to carve out a total takings doct...
Just compensation for future interests should be directly responsive to the Fifth Amendment by direc...
Constitutional takings protections, such as those in the Fifth Amendment of the United States Consti...
There is probably no area of law that is as fraught with confusion and inconsistencies as the regula...
The U.S. Supreme Court has difficulty determining when a regulation is so excessive as to amount to ...
Constitutional protection of private property is grounded in a conflict between two legal principles...
This Article will examine the "fairness" dimension of takings jurisprudence from both the macro and ...
In the American constitutional system the sovereign has the power to enact “regulations which are ne...
Supreme Court decisions over the last three-quarters of a century have turned the words of the Takin...
Section I briefly discusses the basic principles of takings law as enunciated by prior cases, as wel...
In United States v. Armstrong, the Supreme Court stated that the Fifth Amendment Takings Clause “was...
This article revisits and examines whether the fairness and justice doctrine of Armstrong v. United ...
For the past forty years, the United States Supreme Court has embraced the doctrine of regulatory ta...
The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment prohibits the federal government from taking property fo...
The thesis of this Article is that the Court of Federal Claims and the Court of Appeals for the Fede...
For almost thirty-five years, the U.S. Supreme Court has attempted to carve out a total takings doct...
Just compensation for future interests should be directly responsive to the Fifth Amendment by direc...
Constitutional takings protections, such as those in the Fifth Amendment of the United States Consti...
There is probably no area of law that is as fraught with confusion and inconsistencies as the regula...