Just over twenty years ago, the Kentucky Supreme Court declared the commonwealth\u27s primary and secondary public-education finance system-indeed, the entire system of primary and secondary public education in Kentucky-unconstitutional under the common schools clause of the education article in Kentucky\u27s constitution. That case has been widely cited as having ushered in the adequacy movement in school-finance litigation and reform, in which those challenging state school-funding schemes argue that the state has failed to ensure that students are provided an adequate education guaranteed by their state constitutions. Since the Rose decision in Kentucky, some thirty-three school-finance lawsuits have reached final decisions in thirty...
Over the past thirty years, many state supreme courts have inserted themselves into state educationa...
This Note looks at the various ways states fund public education. Then the Note examines the how the...
The past three decades have seen a historic assertion of authority by state courts in the developmen...
Just over twenty years ago, the Kentucky Supreme Court declared the commonwealth\u27s primary and se...
After nearly four decades of school finance litigation, with numerous plaintiff victories based on s...
In the first study of opinions handed down in education adequacy litigation between January 2005 and...
This Article examines how the landscape of school funding litigation has changed over the three deca...
American reformers have long been concerned by substantial differences in the money and resources av...
The adequacy approach to challenging school funding systems has proven the most successful of the wa...
In May 2010, a coalition of California students, parents, and school districts filed a ground-breaki...
In this Article, Dean Underwood explains that school finance cases can be divided into three waves o...
Scholarship of education finance adequacy litigation has nearly universally acknowledged the thorny ...
Education rights cases often devolve into a farce of constitutional brinkmanship played by a miserab...
In this Foreword to the University of Kentucky’s “Rose at 20” Special Feature, I seek to introduce t...
There are always winners and losers in school funding reforms, which often leads to protracted litig...
Over the past thirty years, many state supreme courts have inserted themselves into state educationa...
This Note looks at the various ways states fund public education. Then the Note examines the how the...
The past three decades have seen a historic assertion of authority by state courts in the developmen...
Just over twenty years ago, the Kentucky Supreme Court declared the commonwealth\u27s primary and se...
After nearly four decades of school finance litigation, with numerous plaintiff victories based on s...
In the first study of opinions handed down in education adequacy litigation between January 2005 and...
This Article examines how the landscape of school funding litigation has changed over the three deca...
American reformers have long been concerned by substantial differences in the money and resources av...
The adequacy approach to challenging school funding systems has proven the most successful of the wa...
In May 2010, a coalition of California students, parents, and school districts filed a ground-breaki...
In this Article, Dean Underwood explains that school finance cases can be divided into three waves o...
Scholarship of education finance adequacy litigation has nearly universally acknowledged the thorny ...
Education rights cases often devolve into a farce of constitutional brinkmanship played by a miserab...
In this Foreword to the University of Kentucky’s “Rose at 20” Special Feature, I seek to introduce t...
There are always winners and losers in school funding reforms, which often leads to protracted litig...
Over the past thirty years, many state supreme courts have inserted themselves into state educationa...
This Note looks at the various ways states fund public education. Then the Note examines the how the...
The past three decades have seen a historic assertion of authority by state courts in the developmen...