AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Matthew Jerzyk GENTRIFICATION'S THIRD WAY: AN ANALYSIS OF HOUSING POLICY & GENTRIFICATION IN PROVIDENCE 3 Harvard Law & Policy Review 413 (Summer, 2009) This article examines gentrification in the national housing market and, more specifically, in Providence, Rhode Island and the recent development debate in Providence's poorest neighborhood, Olneyville. While both national and local commentators have disagreed on the benefits and disadvantages of gentrification, this phenomenon has been underway... 2009
Erin Nave GETTING TO THE ROOTS OF SCHOOL SEGREGATION: THE CHALLENGES OF HOUSING REMEDIES IN NORTHERN SCHOOL DESEGREGATION LITIGATION 21 National Black Law Journal 173 (2009) Introduction. 174 I. The Relationship between Housing and Schools in the North. 174 II. The Challenges to Combining Housing and School Litigation. 177 A. Proving Causation in Combined School and Housing Claims Is Difficult and Requires More Resources Than Most Plaintiffs Are Willing Or Able to Expend. 177 B. The Justice Department Is Unwilling Or... 2009
Timothy E. Heinle GUILTY BY ASSOCIATION: WHAT THE DECISION IN BOSTON HOUSING AUTHORITY v. GARCIA MEANS FOR THE INNOCENT FAMILY MEMBERS OF CRIMINALS LIVING IN PUBLIC HOUSING IN MASSACHUSETTS 35 New England Journal on Criminal and Civil Confinement 213 (Winter, 2009) The purpose of this article is to examine the substantial impact that the recent decision in Boston Housing Authority v. Garcia will have on the friends and family members of convicted criminals who are living in federally funded public housing in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. In Garcia, the Plaintiff was a longtime tenant with the Boston... 2009
Leslie A. Lunney HAS THE FOURTH AMENDMENT GONE TO THE DOGS?: UNREASONABLE EXPANSION OF CANINE SNIFF DOCTRINE TO INCLUDE SNIFFS OF THE HOME 88 Oregon Law Review 829 (2009) I. Training and Certification of Drug-Detection Dogs and the Science of the Canine Sniff. 834 II. Competing Lines of U.S. Supreme Court Caselaw: Which Line Controls Canine Sniffs of the Home?. 842 A. Focus on the Item: No Legitimate Expectation of Privacy in Possession of Unlawful Contraband. 843 1. Lawful Antecedent Seizure. 850 2. Reduced... 2009
Mark S. Scarberry HISTORICAL CONSIDERATIONS AND CONGRESSIONAL REPRESENTATION FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: CONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE D.C. HOUSE VOTING RIGHTS BILL IN LIGHT OF SECTION TWO OF THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT AND THE HISTORY OF THE CREATION OF THE DISTRICT 60 Alabama Law Review 783 (2009) A State is represented in the Senate and in the House as a State. There is no constitutional capacity for representation except through State organization. Representatives in this House are apportioned by the Constitution among the several States. Representative George S. Boutwell, a leading Radical Republican, after arguing for constitutional... 2009
Dara Smith HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS: SEXUAL ORIENTATION DISCRIMINATION AND THE RIGHT TO ADEQUATE HOUSING IN INTERNATIONAL LAW 40 George Washington International Law Review 1343 (2009) In 2006, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force reported that although only 3 to 5 percent of people in the United States are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transsexual (LGBT), 20 to 40 percent of homeless youths are LGBT individuals. In part, the report attributed this vastly disproportionate rate within homelessness to pervasive discrimination... 2009
Ngai Pindell HOME SWEET HOME? THE EFFICACY OF RENTAL RESTRICTIONS TO PROMOTE NEIGHBORHOOD STABILITY 29 Saint Louis University Public Law Review 41 (2009) I. Introduction. 42 II. Varieties Of Rental Restrictions. 46 A. Minimal or No Regulation. 47 B. Procedural Rental Requirements. 49 C. Land Use Approvals. 50 D. Short-term Vacation Rentals. 54 E. Substantive Rental Requirements. 56 F. Neighborhood Self-determination. 57 G. Development Agreement Restrictions. 58 H. Private Covenants. 60 III.... 2009
Richard A. Hooks Wayman HOMELESS QUEER YOUTH: NATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON RESEARCH, BEST PRACTICES, AND EVIDENCE-BASED INTERVENTIONS 7 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 587 (Spring/Summer, 2009) Janelle left the comfort of her home to attend college. During her freshman year, Janelle experienced a lot of stress and anxiety and voluntarily checked herself into a mental health unit at a local hospital for assessment and counseling. Janelle's parents came in from out of state to find out how she was doing and spoke to the hospital staff.... 2009
James J. Kelly, Jr. HOMES AFFORDABLE FOR GOOD: COVENANTS AND GROUND LEASES AS LONG-TERM RESALE-RESTRICTION DEVICES 29 Saint Louis University Public Law Review 9 (2009) I. Introduction. 10 II. Dedication of Land to Permanently Affordable Homeownership. 16 A. Why? The Goods of Homeownership. 16 B. Shared Equity Resident-Owned Housing as Achieving These Goods. 19 III. Two Approaches to Resale Restrictions: Lockbox and Stewardship. 23 A. The Legal Challenges for Long-Term Resale Restrictions. 23 1. Restraints on... 2009
Paul Boudreaux HOMES, RIGHTS, AND PRIVATE COMMUNITIES 20 University of Florida Journal of Law and Public Policy 479 (December, 2009) A sixty-six-year-old Florida man was jailed briefly in 2008 for failing to follow a court order to comply with the rules of his homeowners association, which required him to sod his lawn. Due to a rise in his adjustable rate mortgage payment, he asserted that he could not afford to follow the landscaping requirements of the residential covenant.... 2009
Prepared By: Aimee Faught HOUSE RESOLUTION 5: PARAMOUNT RIGHT TO LIFE AMENDING ARTICLE I, SECTION I OF THE CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA 2 John Marshall Law Journal 331 (2009) First Signature: Rep. Martin Scott (2nd). Co-Sponsors: Rep. Charlice Byrd (20th), Rep. Melvin Everson (106th), Rep. James Mills (25th), Rep. Rick Crawford (16th) and Rep. Tom Rice (51st). Summary: House Resolution 5 proposes to amend Article I, Section I of the Constitution of the State of Georgia to provide that the paramount right to life is... 2009
Matthew Sag, Tonja Jacobi, Maxim Sytch IDEOLOGY AND EXCEPTIONALISM IN INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY: AN EMPIRICAL STUDY 97 California Law Review 801 (June, 2009) Can Supreme Court justices' views on abortion, racial profiling, and medical malpractice predict how they will vote in intellectual property cases? It may be natural to assume that a justice's views on those topics are irrelevant; they are, after all, unrelated legal fields. It is certainly the dominant view among intellectual property (IP)... 2009
Kristen A. Carpenter, Sonia K. Katyal, Angela R. Riley IN DEFENSE OF PROPERTY 118 Yale Law Journal 1022 (April, 2009) This Article responds to an emerging view, in scholarship and popular society, that it is normatively undesirable to employ property law as a means of protecting indigenous cultural heritage. Recent critiques suggest that propertizing culture impedes the free flow of ideas, speech, and perhaps culture itself. In our view, these critiques arise... 2009
Robin Paul Malloy INCLUSION BY DESIGN: ACCESSIBLE HOUSING AND MOBILITY IMPAIRMENT 60 Hastings Law Journal 699 (March, 2009) As a means of setting the stage for the discussion in this Article, the introduction opens with three vignettes. The short narratives on the lives of three different individuals help to quickly inform the reader about the difficulties confronting the people and families dealing with inaccessible housing and mobility impairment. Pauli was a... 2009
Otto J. Hetzel INTRODUCTORY COMMENTS ON THE FAIR HOUSING TESTING CONFERENCE AND THE IMPORTANCE OF TESTING TO ACHIEVE COMPLIANCE WITH THE FAIR HOUSING ACT 41 Urban Lawyer 229 (Spring, 2009) A conference on fair housing testing was held at Wayne State University Law School, through its Fair Housing Educational Program (FHEP), and the Fair Housing Center of Metropolitan Detroit (FHC), its partner in providing fair housing educational training. We are aware of no other training held exclusively on this topic since the enactment of the... 2009
  KEEPING CURRENT--PROPERTY 23-JUN Probate and Property 18 (May/June, 2009) Keeping Current--Property offers a look at selected recent cases, literature, and legislation. The editors of Probate & Property welcome suggestions and contributions from readers. COVENANTS: Restrictive covenant need not be mutual to be enforceable. The owner of three contiguous lots built a house on one of them. Being concerned that construction... 2009
Judge Michael A. Corriero , Michelle E. Haddad KNOCK ON ANY DOOR: THE INTERSECTION BETWEEN HOUSING AND THE JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM 16 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 631 (Symposium Issue 2009) In the 1940s film, Knock On Any Door, fictional character Nick Romano started out as an innocent altar boy living in a middle class neighborhood in Chicago. His life changed dramatically when his father was wrongly convicted of a crime and sent to prison where he died of a heart attack. His family, left destitute, was forced to move out of their... 2009
Keaton Norquist LOCAL PREFERENCES IN AFFORDABLE HOUSING: SPECIAL TREATMENT FOR THOSE WHO LIVE OR WORK IN A MUNICIPALITY? 36 Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review 207 (2009) Abstract: Local governments are increasingly granting preference to local residents and employees when selecting occupants for affordable housing set-asides. These preferences risk being invalidated for three reasons. First, courts could view the preferences as a penalty on non-residents' fundamental right to travel and migration. Second,... 2009
Richard D. Marsico LOOKING BACK AND LOOKING AHEAD AS THE HOME MORTGAGE DISCLOSURE ACT TURNS THIRTY-FIVE: THE ROLE OF PUBLIC DISCLOSURE OF LENDING DATA IN A TIME OF FINANCIAL CRISIS 29 Review of Banking and Financial Law 205 (Fall, 2009) Congress passed the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) in 1975 as a tool to end redlining. Redlining is a broad term that covers many different practices. In the context of the passage of HMDA, redlining is a lender's refusal to lend, or lending on more onerous terms, in urban, older, low-income or predominantly minority neighborhoods, not based... 2009
Mary Pattillo MAKING FAIR (PUBLIC) HOUSING CLAIMS IN A POST-RACISM LEGAL CONTEXT 18-WTR Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 215 (Winter, 2009) In 1969, the federal courts ruled in Gautreaux v. Chicago Housing Authority that public housing in Chicago was intentionally and illegally concentrated in black neighborhoods and that blacks were restricted to living in these segregated projects. In the mid-1990s, a group of North Kenwood-Oakland (NKO) residents waged their case against public... 2009
Raegan Joern MEAN STREETS: VIOLENCE AGAINST THE HOMELESS AND THE MAKINGS OF A HATE CRIME 6 Hastings Race and Poverty Law Journal 305 (Summer 2009) On January 12, 2006, a surveillance camera in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, caught two teenagers in the act of beating a homeless man in an unprovoked attack. In the footage, the victim, later identified as Jacques Pierre, attempted to defend himself while his assailants beat him with baseball bats. The recorded assault on Jacques Pierre was one in a... 2009
Erica Frankenberg METROPOLITAN SCHOOLING AND HOUSING INTEGRATION 18-WTR Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 193 (Winter, 2009) Four decades after the Fair Housing Act and more than five decades after the Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka decision, neighborhoods and schools remain deeply segregated. Although residential segregation between blacks and whites has been declining since 1970, it still remains quite high, particularly in the nation's largest metropolitan... 2009
Karen Wong NARROWING THE DEFINITION OF "DWELLING" UNDER THE FAIR HOUSING ACT 56 UCLA Law Review 1867 (August, 2009) The Fair Housing Act was enacted in order to protect certain groups against discrimination in housing. The Act extends this protection to any dwelling, but its coverage is not well defined for nontraditional sleeping facilities such as homeless shelters, substance abuse treatment facilities, or tent cities. Courts have applied the Fair Housing... 2009
Krystle L. Jackson NEED FOR REFORM: THE PENNSYLVANIA "CURATIVE AMENDMENT" IN LIGHT OF THE NATIONAL HOUSING CRISIS 18 Widener Law Journal 937 (2009) The curative amendment process, which allows landowners to challenge local zoning ordinances by filing curative amendment[s] directly to the municipality instead of making a challenge to the state or local courts, is unique to Pennsylvania. This process provides landowners and developers alike with a valuable tool in battling exclusionary zoning... 2009
Jeffrey D. Dillman NEW STRATEGIES FOR OLD PROBLEMS: THE FAIR HOUSING ACT AT 40 57 Cleveland State Law Review 197 (2009) I. Introduction. 197 II. Advances in Fair Housing Since 1968. 198 III. Evidence of Persistent Discrimination and Segregation. 200 IV. Past Strategies: Enforcement and Education. 204 V. The Future of Fair Housing. 205 2009
Joy S. Miller OHIO CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION v. AKRON METROPOLITAN HOUSING AUTHORITY 35 Ohio Northern University Law Review 1224 (2009) In July of 2008, the Supreme Court of Ohio decided Ohio Civil Rights Commission v. Akron Metropolitan Housing Authority. While at their home the Harper family was continually racially harassed by their neighbors. Attempting to deal with the derogatory statements of their neighbors, the Harpers sought help from their landlord. Despite the encounters... 2009
Marian L. Black, Janet L. Bozeman PRACTICAL ISSUES IN PLANNING FOR AGE-RESTRICTED HOUSING UNDER THE HOUSING FOR OLDER PERSONS ACT (HOPA) 23-FEB Probate and Property 34 (January/February, 2009) The astounding statistics regarding the post-Second World War generation, the baby boomers, are well-known. Increasingly as the 80 million baby boomers in the American population age, developers will undoubtedly seek to take advantage of this substantial demographic to create age-restricted communities to suit boomers' desires and needs. These... 2009
James M. Lammendola , Michael A. Valenza PRACTICING FAIR HOUSING PRINCIPLES IN SOUTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA BEFORE THE 1968 FAIR HOUSING ACT: MARGARET H. COLLINS AND SUBURBAN FAIR HOUSING, INC. 11 Atlantic Law Journal 107 (2009) On August 28, 1963 in the West African country of Ghana, author, activist and National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) co-founder W.E.B. DuBois, born the year the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, died. In Washington, D.C, Dr Martin Luther King unleashed his I Have a Dream speech. That same day in the Philadelphia... 2009
Alfred L. Brophy PROPERTY AND PROGRESS: ANTEBELLUM LANDSCAPE ART AND PROPERTY LAW 40 McGeorge Law Review 603 (2009) Landscape art in the Antebellum Era (the period before the American Civil War, 1861-1865), often depicts the role of humans on the landscape. Humans appear as hunters, settlers, and travelers, and human structures appear as well, from rude paths, cabins, mills, bridges, and canals to railroads and telegraph wires. Those images parallel cases,... 2009
Nestor M. Davidson PROPERTY AND RELATIVE STATUS 107 Michigan Law Review 757 (March, 2009) Property does many things--it incentivizes productive activity, facilitates exchange, forms an integral part of individual identity, and shapes communities. But property does something equally fundamental: it communicates. And perhaps the most ubiquitous and important messages that property communicates have to do with relative status, with the... 2009
Richard Marsico, Jane Yoo RACIAL DISPARITIES IN SUBPRIME HOME MORTGAGE LENDING IN NEW YORK CITY: MEANING AND IMPLICATIONS 53 New York Law School Law Review 1011 (2008/2009) The recent turmoil in the financial markets related to rising default rates on subprime home purchase loans should not obscure the fact that study after study has shown African-Americans, Latinos, and residents of predominantly minority neighborhoods receive a disproportionately high percentage of subprime home purchase loans. Not only do... 2009
David S. Bogen REBUILDING THE SLAUGHTER-HOUSE: THE CASES' SUPPORT FOR CIVIL RIGHTS 42 Akron Law Review 1129 (2009) The Slaughter-House Cases have a bad reputation for good reason. Justice Miller's narrow reading of the Privileges or Immunities Clause was used to prevent the federal government from adequately protecting African-Americans after the Civil War. Further, his opinion for the Court significantly delayed the application of the Bill of Rights to the... 2009
Elizabeth K. Julian RECENT ADVOCACY RELATED TO THE LOW INCOME HOUSING TAX CREDIT AND FAIR HOUSING 18-WTR Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 185 (Winter, 2009) We have long recognized that government can and should act to ensure that all people have a decent place to live. And we know that place means not only the housing structure but where it is located. The Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program is the latest in a line of programs through which we have chosen to address this worthy goal.... 2009
Marci A. Reddick , Danielle B. Tucker RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN INDIANA REAL PROPERTY LAW 42 Indiana Law Review 1187 (2009) With the unstable state of the real estate market and the global economy, an inordinate number of residential and commercial properties are being acquired via foreclosure. A case before the Indiana Court of Appeals in spring 2008 illustrates some of the problems that arise in purchasing distressed real estate and provides practitioners a review of... 2009
John A. Powell REFLECTIONS ON THE PAST, LOOKING TO THE FUTURE: THE FAIR HOUSING ACT AT 40 18-WTR Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 145 (Winter, 2009) Every ten years, dutiful law review editors across the nation call upon commentators and scholars to reflect upon the state of housing in the United States. Among all of the commemorative scholarship in the area of civil rights, perhaps none can be as somber or dispiriting as the state of fair housing. Although, and perhaps because, housing was... 2009
Natasha M. Trifun RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION AFTER THE FAIR HOUSING ACT 36-FALL Human Rights 14 (Fall, 2009) The year 2008 marked the fortieth anniversary of the passage of the Fair Housing Act (FHA), yet housing discrimination and related socioeconomic problems persist. The formal barriers to residential integration have been lifted, but many African Americans still face limited housing choices, and live in poor neighborhoods that lack the... 2009
Adam J. Levitin RESOLVING THE FORECLOSURE CRISIS: MODIFICATION OF MORTGAGES IN BANKRUPTCY 2009 Wisconsin Law Review 565 (2009) This Article empirically tests the economic assumption underlying the policy against bankruptcy modification of home-mortgage debt--that protecting lenders from losses in bankruptcy encourages them to lend more and at lower rates, and thus encourages homeownership. The data show that the assumption is mistaken; permitting modification would have... 2009
Nicole Schmidt SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC HOUSING AS AN AVENUE FOR EMPOWERMENT: THE CASE FOR SPIRITED COMPLIANCE WITH TENANT PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENTS 6 Hastings Race and Poverty Law Journal 333 (Summer 2009) Public housing developments, better known as the projects, are infamous for high rates of crime and squalid conditions. A conversation with any public housing tenant will reveal a plethora of deficiencies in the administration of housing developments. Citing problems from lack of communication and responsiveness to substandard and even unsanitary... 2009
William Josephson SENATE ELECTION OF THE VICE PRESIDENT AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT 11 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law 597 (February, 2009) C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 598 A. The Twelfth Amendment Procedures. 599 B. Presidential and Vice Presidential Terms. 609 C. Outline of Article. 612 II. Senate Vice Presidential Election. 613 A. Two Highest Numbers on the List. 613 B. By When Must the Senate Vote?. 614 C. Absent Senators. 618 D. Cloture. 618 E. The Vice President as... 2009
Eric S. Tars SEPARATE & UNEQUAL IN THE SAME CLASSROOM: HOMELESS STUDENTS IN AMERICA'S PUBLIC SCHOOLS 14 Public Interest Law Reporter 267 (Summer 2009) Over one million children experience homelessness in America every year, and with the growing foreclosure crisis, another two million children will likely experience homelessness in the next year. Homeless children face many of the same problems as poor and racial minority children across the country, indeed poor and minority families are... 2009
Lisa T. Alexander STAKEHOLDER PARTICIPATION IN NEW GOVERNANCE: LESSONS FROM CHICAGO'S PUBLIC HOUSING REFORM EXPERIMENT 16 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 117 (Winter, 2009) The efficacy of the public-private partnership as a tool for social reform is the subject of continued scholarly and public debate. New governance theory, an increasingly popular form of jurisprudence, constructs an optimistic vision of stakeholder collaboration in public-private partnerships that justifies the use of the public-private partnership... 2009
Raymond H. Brescia SUBPRIME COMMUNITIES: REVERSE REDLINING, THE FAIR HOUSING ACT AND EMERGING ISSUES IN LITIGATION REGARDING THE SUBPRIME MORTGAGE CRISIS 2 Albany Government Law Review 164 (2009) I. The Subprime Mortgage Crisis and Local Communities. 168 A. The Impact. 168 B. Key Elements of the Subprime Crisis that Brought About these Impacts. 170 C. The Discriminatory Roots of the Subprime Mortgage Crisis. 172 II: A Municipal Lawsuit Under the Fair Housing Act to Remedy the Impacts of the Subprime Mortgage Crisis: Mayor and City Council... 2009
G. Michael Payton, J.D. , Matthew D. Miko, J.D. SUBSTANTIAL EQUIVALENCY AND THE FUTURE OF FAIR HOUSING IN OHIO 57 Cleveland State Law Review 257 (2009) I. Introduction. 257 II. The Meaning and Importance of Substantial Equivalency. 258 III. Recent Developments in Ohio's Fair Housing Law. 259 A. A Landlord's Liability for Tenant on Tenant Harassment. 261 B. Preventative Relief and Retrofitting Inaccessible Housing. 261 C. Standing of Fair Housing Organizations. 263 D. Issuance of Subpoenas During... 2009
Aaron O'Toole, Benita Jones TENANT PURCHASE LAWS AS A TOOL FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING PRESERVATION: THE D.C. EXPERIENCE 18-SUM Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 367 (Summer, 2009) I. Introduction. 368 II. Legislative Purpose and Statutory Overview. 368 A. Legislative History and Purpose of the Act. 369 B. Statutory Overview: Opportunity to Purchase and Offer of Sale. 370 C. TOPA Timeline for Tenants to Exercise Rights. 372 1. Registration. 372 2. Negotiation. 372 3. Settlement. 373 D. Related Tenant Protections. 374 III.... 2009
Gregory S. Alexander THE COMPLEX CORE OF PROPERTY 94 Cornell Law Review 1063 (May, 2009) In this Reply, I respond to critiques of my article, The Social-Obligation Norm in American Property Law, by Professors Henry Smith, Eric Claeys, and Jedediah Purdy. Professor Henry Smith's critique is grounded in his basic rule-utilitarian point that the right to exclusion must be understood as the core of ownership, a point that he has... 2009
Hannibal Travis THE CULTURAL AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY INTERESTS OF THE INDIGENOUS PEOPLES OF TURKEY AND IRAQ 15 Texas Wesleyan Law Review 415 (Spring 2009) I. Defining Indigenous Peoples and Their Property Interests under International Law. 422 II. The Destruction of Indigenous Peoples' Cultural and Intellectual Property in Turkey and Iraq. 432 A. The Assyrians of Anatolia and Mesopotamia. 432 B. The Greeks of Anatolia and Cyprus. 451 C. The Jews of Anatolia and Mesopotamia. 461 D. The Mandaeans and... 2009
Benjamin Harney THE ECONOMICS OF EXCLUSIONARY ZONING AND AFFORDABLE HOUSING 38 Stetson Law Review 459 (Winter 2009) The President of the United States created a Commission to study local zoning regulations and their impact on housing costs. After two years of intense research, the Commission submitted its much-anticipated report to the President. The 504-page report concluded: Zoning affects land values in a number of ways. First, by protecting development... 2009
Ngai Pindell THE FAIR HOUSING ACT AT FORTY: PREDATORY LENDING AND THE CITY AS PLAINTIFF 18-WTR Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 169 (Winter, 2009) I. Introduction. 169 II. The FHA's role in Combating Discriminatory Lending Practices. 170 III. The Elusive Nature of Predatory and Subprime Lending. 171 IV. The FHA's Traditional Application to Discriminatory Lending and Redlining. 172 V. The Current Battleground: Applying the FHA to Cases of Reverse Redlining. 173 VI. The Next Phase? The City as... 2009
Kevin M. Wilemon THE FAIR HOUSING ACT, THE COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT, AND THE RIGHT OF ROOMMATE SEEKERS TO DISCRIMINATE ONLINE 29 Washington University Journal of Law and Policy 375 (2009) Risking overstatement only slightly, the Internet represents a brave new world of free speech. When the 90th Congress passed Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, it could not predict all of the contexts in which the Fair Housing Act (FHA) would be applied. Just as the 90th Congress could not have envisioned the FHA's application to... 2009
John A. Powell , Jason Reece THE FUTURE OF FAIR HOUSING AND FAIR CREDIT: FROM CRISIS TO OPPORTUNITY 57 Cleveland State Law Review 209 (2009) I. Introduction. 210 II. From the Inner City to Wall Street and Beyond: The Credit Crisis and Global Systems of Marginalization. 213 A. Securitization, Deregulation, and the Credit Crisis. 213 B. Global Systems of Marginalization and an Advocacy Response. 218 III. The Racial Footprint of the Credit Crisis. 219 A. Race and the Credit Crisis: What... 2009
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