AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
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
Robert M. Zinman, Novica Petrovski THE HOME MORTGAGE AND CHAPTER 13: AN ESSAY ON UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES 17 American Bankruptcy Institute Law Review 133 (Spring, 2009) Assume a bank holds a $400,000 loan secured by a mortgage on Bertha Borrower's home (her principal residence). The value of Bertha's home has fallen to $200,000. Bertha is in default under the mortgage and the mortgagee notifies her that it intends to foreclose. In response, Bertha files a voluntary petition for chapter 13 relief which stays any... 2009
Katherine Evans THE ICE STORM IN U.S. HOMES: AN URGENT CALL FOR POLICY CHANGE 33 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 561 (2009) Since its creation in 2003, the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has used increasingly aggressive tactics to enforce U.S. immigration law. One of ICE's most prominent enforcement initiatives is its practice of raiding the homes of immigrants. Accounts of home raids from victims all over the country reveal a pattern of practice... 2009
John Obee THE IMPORTANCE OF TESTING EVIDENCE IN HOUSING DISCRIMINATION SALES TRANSACTIONS: TWO CASE STUDIES 41 Urban Lawyer 309 (Spring, 2009) In the forty years since the adoption of the federal Fair Housing Act, fair housing centers and civil rights attorneys have primarily used one key means of developing evidence of unlawful housing discrimination, i.e., testing. In the landmark United States Supreme Court case, Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman, the Court determined that testers are an... 2009
Michael Diamond THE MEANING AND NATURE OF PROPERTY: HOMEOWNERSHIP AND SHARED EQUITY IN THE CONTEXT OF POVERTY 29 Saint Louis University Public Law Review 85 (2009) Property is that sole and despotic dominion which one man claims and exercises over the external things of the world, in total exclusion of the right of any other individual in the universe. Blackstone's famous statement, derived from Lockean principals, has come to exemplify the currently popular, largely unquestioned, view of property in American... 2009
A. Mechele Dickerson THE MYTH OF HOME OWNERSHIP AND WHY HOME OWNERSHIP IS NOT ALWAYS A GOOD THING 84 Indiana Law Journal 189 (Winter, 2009) Home ownership is viewed as key to achieving the American Dream and is now an essential element of the American cultural norm of what it means to be a success. The metastasizing mortgage crisis suggests, however, that our home ownership policies are out-dated, misguided, and largely ignore the actual market realities many potential homeowners now... 2009
James Robert Breymaier THE NEED TO PRIORITIZE THE AFFIRMATIVE FURTHERING OF FAIR HOUSING: A CASE STATEMENT 57 Cleveland State Law Review 245 (2009) I. Introduction. 245 II. Affirmative Furthering Is Necessary for Metropolitan Structural Change. 248 III. Racial Attitudes Toward Integration. 250 IV. Affirmative Furthering, Integration, and Structural Change. 252 V. Proactive Models of Intentional Integration and Affirmative Furthering. 253 2009
Gregory S. Alexander THE SOCIAL-OBLIGATION NORM IN AMERICAN PROPERTY LAW 94 Cornell Law Review 745 (May, 2009) This Article seeks to provide in property legal theory an alternative to law-and-economics theory, the dominant mode of theorizing about property in contemporary legal scholarship. I call this alternative the social-obligation theory. I argue that American property law, both on the private and public sides, includes a social-obligation norm, but... 2009
Bernadette Atuahene THINGS FALL APART: THE ILLEGITIMACY OF PROPERTY RIGHTS IN THE CONTEXT OF PAST PROPERTY THEFT 51 Arizona Law Review 829 (Winter 2009) Past property theft is often a volatile political issue that has threatened to destabilize many nascent democracies. How does a transitional state avoid present-day property-related disobedience when a significant number of people believe that the current property distribution is illegitimate because of past property theft? To explore this... 2009
Stephanie Hunter McMahon TO SAVE STATE RESIDENTS: STATES' USE OF COMMUNITY PROPERTY FOR FEDERAL TAX REDUCTION, 1939-1947 27 Law and History Review 585 (Fall, 2009) In 1939, at the end of almost two decades of statewide want and despair, Oklahoma adopted the community property system to save state residents on their federal income tax. Between 1939 and 1947, Oklahoma and four other states openly and unabashedly exploited the Supreme Court's creation of what amounted to a tax loophole for the nation's... 2009
Gregory D. Squires URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND UNEQUAL ACCESS TO HOUSING FINANCE SERVICES 53 New York Law School Law Review 255 (2008/2009) Dramatic changes have taken place in the nation's mortgage lending markets in recent years. Passage of the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) in 1977, enforcement of the federal Fair Housing Act (FHA), and compliance with a range of local, state, and national fair lending rules have increased access to credit for many households and communities... 2009
Melissa A. Cohen VINDICATING THE MATRIARCH: A FAIR HOUSING ACT CHALLENGE TO FEDERAL NO-FAULT EVICTIONS FROM PUBLIC HOUSING 16 Michigan Journal of Gender & Law 299 (2009) I. Introduction 300 II. The Law 301 III. Criticisms of the Rucker Decision 303 IV. Some Proposed Strategies to Challenge or Reform the Federal No-Fault Eviction Policy 306 V. Sex Discrimination as a New Angle of Attack 308 VI. Disparate Impact Claims Under the Fair Housing Act 310 VII. The Arlington Heights Analysis 312 A. Arlington... 2009
Evan Forrest Anderson VOUCHING FOR LANDLORDS: WITHDRAWING FROM THE SECTION 8 HOUSING CHOICE VOUCHER PROGRAM AND RESULTING DISPARATE IMPACT CLAIMS --GRAOCH ASSOCIATES #33, L.P. V. LOUISVILLE/JEFFERSON COUNTY METRO HUMAN RELATIONS COMMISSION, 508 F.3D 366 (6TH CIR. 2007) 78 University of Cincinnati Law Review 371 (Fall 2009) The poverty and social isolation of minority groups in central cities is the single most serious problem of the American city today. It must be attacked with urgency, with a greater commitment of resources than has heretofore been the case, and with programs designed especially for this purpose. -- Daniel Patrick Moynihan More than 2.1 million... 2009
Scott N. Gilbert YOU CAN MOVE IN BUT YOU CAN'T STAY: TO PROTECT OCCUPANCY RIGHTS AFTER HALPRIN, THE FAIR HOUSING ACT NEEDS TO BE AMENDED TO PROHIBIT POST-ACQUISITION DISCRIMINATION 42 John Marshall Law Review 751 (Spring 2009) The Blochs are Jewish, and their religious beliefs require them to display a religious symbol called a mezuzah on the outer doorframe of their residence, which they did for over thirty years without conflict. When the Blochs' condominium board reinterpreted an existing rule to prohibit display of the mezuzah, their longstanding practice now clashed... 2009
Lauren E. Burke "ONE STRIKE" EVICTIONS IN PUBLIC HOUSING AND THE DISPARATE IMPACT ON BLACK PUBLIC HOUSING TENANTS IN WASHINGTON, D.C. 52 Howard Law Journal 167 (Fall 2008) The Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution provides that No State shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law . . . This clause is commonly referred to as the Due Process Clause because in order to limit or eliminate a person's enjoyment of the constitutional guarantees of life, liberty... 2008
Lisa T. Alexander A SOCIOLEGAL HISTORY OF PUBLIC HOUSING REFORM IN CHICAGO 17-WTR Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 155 (Fall, 2007/Winter, 2008) Waiting for Gautreaux: A Story of Segregation, Housing, and the Black Ghetto By Alexander Polikoff Northwestern University Press (2006) 422 pages Black on the Block: The Politics of Race and Class in the City By Mary Pattillo University of Chicago Press (2007) 388 pages As the Housing Opportunities for People Everywhere (HOPE VI) program enters its... 2008
John K. Pierre , Gail S. Stephenson AFTER KATRINA: A CRITICAL LOOK AT FEMA'S FAILURE TO PROVIDE HOUSING FOR VICTIMS OF NATURAL DISASTERS 68 Louisiana Law Review 443 (Winter, 2008) On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina, the costliest and one of the five deadliest hurricanes ever to strike the United States, struck the northern Gulf Coast region, making initial landfall in Louisiana, before moving across Mississippi and into Alabama. Hundreds of thousands of people, many of them low-to-moderate-income residents, were forced... 2008
Bradford J. Sayler AMPLIFYING ILLEGALITY: USING THE EXCEPTION TO CDA IMMUNITY CARVED OUT BY FAIR HOUSING COUNCIL OF SAN FERNANDO VALLEY V. ROOMMATES.COM TO COMBAT ABUSIVE EDITING TACTICS 16 George Mason Law Review 203 (Fall, 2008) The Internet age has introduced a variety of new ways for private citizens to express themselves. Historically, Average Joe has sat on the sidelines of the world and passively absorbed the word as spread by the few active players. Today, Joe can spread his own message across the globe at the click of a mouse. With nothing more than a computer and... 2008
Joseph Sant ASIAN AMERICANS AND SEATTLE'S OPEN HOUSING MOVEMENT 1 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 167 (2008) The civil rights struggle for fair housing legislation at the national level was accompanied by calls at the state and local levels throughout the country to enact ordinances banning discrimination in housing. In Seattle, the effort to formally ban discrimination in housing spanned a decade, beginning with the ill-fated 1957 state fair housing law... 2008
Andrew D. Appleby BALL BUSTERS: HOW THE IRS SHOULD TAX RECORD-SETTING BASEBALLS AND OTHER FOUND PROPERTY UNDER THE TREASURE TROVE REGULATION 33 Vermont Law Review 43 (Fall, 2008) Currently, a vital debate has the country split in two-a debate that tears at the very fabric of America's tradition and culture: how should the IRS tax the catcher of a record-setting baseball? This question has raised the ire of Congress, confounded the IRS, and riled up tax geeks across the country. There are two prevalent conflicting views on... 2008
Cynthia Soohoo , Suzanne Stolz BRINGING THEORIES OF HUMAN RIGHTS CHANGE HOME 77 Fordham Law Review 459 (November, 2008) A recent poll conducted by The Opportunity Agenda indicates that most Americans identify with human rights as a value and think that human rights violations are occurring in the United States. Eighty-one percent of Americans polled agreed that we should strive to uphold human rights in the United States because there are people being denied their... 2008
Robert G. Schwemm COX, HALPRIN, AND DISCRIMINATORY MUNICIPAL SERVICES UNDER THE FAIR HOUSING ACT 41 Indiana Law Review 717 (2008) When the Federal Fair Housing Act (FHA) was passed forty years ago, its proponents saw it as a way of breaking the bonds of race-based ghettos and, with them, the limits on blacks' access to equal opportunity in education, suburban jobs, and all other aspects of the American dream. The goal of the FHA was not merely to end housing discrimination... 2008
Jo Carrillo DANGEROUS LOANS: CONSUMER CHALLENGES TO ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGES 5 Berkeley Business Law Journal 1 (Spring 2008) ABSTRACT: As recently as the first quarter of 2007, home ownership rates were up across the board, including in low-income, fixed-income, and minority communities. By the fourth quarter of 2007, sales volume had flattened, housing prices had peaked or dropped, interest rates for consumers were uncertain, and mortgage lenders had tightened access to... 2008
Edward Imperatore DISCRIMINATORY CONDEMNATIONS AND THE FAIR HOUSING ACT 96 Georgetown Law Journal 1027 (March, 2008) C1-3Table of Contents L1-2Introduction . L31027 I. The History of Blight in the Context of Eminent Domain. 1030 a. the origins of blight and its relationship to takings jurisprudence. 1030 b. blight as a subjective and malleable concept. 1033 c. policy considerations concerning eminent domain. 1034 II. Proposed Solutions Are Inadequate. 1035 a.... 2008
Tali Schaefer DISPOSABLE MOTHERS: PAID IN-HOME CARETAKING AND THE REGULATION OF PARENTHOOD 19 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 305 (2008) ABSTRACT: Recent custody decisions in the United States have treated paid in-home caretakers as substitutes for parents who are either unavailable or unable to care for their children. They have created a legal category of nanny that detaches primary caretaking from the caretaker and attributes care provided by in-home caretakers to paying... 2008
Shirley Darby Howell DOMESTIC VIOLENCE, FLAWED INTERPRETATIONS OF 42 U.S.C. § 1437(D)(L)(6), SEXUAL HARASSMENT IN PUBLIC HOUSING, AND MUNICIPAL VIOLATIONS OF THE EIGHTH AMENDMENT: MAKING WOMEN HOMELESS AND KEEPING THEM HOMELESS 13 Jones Law Review 1 (Fall, 2008) Homeless women accompanied by at least one child comprise the fastest growing segment of America's homeless population. This article examines the great poverty that has befallen so many women in America, focusing specifically upon the links between domestic violence, the Department of Housing and Urban Development v. Rucker decision interpreting 42... 2008
Judith Browne-Dianis, Anita Sinha EXILING THE POOR: THE CLASH OF REDEVELOPMENT AND FAIR HOUSING IN POST-KATRINA NEW ORLEANS 51 Howard Law Journal 481 (Spring 2008) Katrina was a tragedy, but its aftermath presents the most exciting urban opportunity since San Francisco in 1906. Pioneers, please apply. Hurricane Katrina caused a crisis of a magnitude never before seen on U.S. soil. With thousands dead and hundreds of thousands displaced, policymakers swiftly presented the tragedy as an opportunity for New... 2008
Elizabeth K. Julian FAIR HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT: TIME TO COME TOGETHER 41 Indiana Law Review 555 (2008) Forty years ago, shortly before the passage of the Fair Housing Act, the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, more generally known as the Kerner Commission, famously declared that the country was moving toward two societies, one black, one white-separate and unequal. The Commission urged, among other things, the enactment of a... 2008
Chris A. Kolosov FAIR HOUSING LAWS AND THE CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS OF ROOMMATE SEEKERS 4 Modern American 3 (Fall, 2008) Imagine a biracial, heterosexual, female Buddhist, new to Los Angeles and looking for a place to live. Short of money, she notes the following roommate-wanted ads: 1. We are three Christian females . We have weekly bible studies and bi-weekly times of fellowship. 2. The person applying for the room MUST be a BLACK GAY MALE. 3. This is a Christian... 2008
Creola Johnson FIGHT BLIGHT: CITIES SUE TO HOLD LENDERS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE RISE IN FORECLOSURES AND ABANDONED PROPERTIES 2008 Utah Law Review 1169 (2008) I. Introduction. 1170 II. Rising Foreclosures, Abandoned Homes, and Blight on Surrounding Neighborhoods. 1173 A. Predatory Subprime Loans Are the Cause of Increased Foreclosures and Abandonments. 1174 B. The True Pecuniary and Social Costs of Abandoned Blighted Properties. 1180 III. Current Legal Responses to Combat the Rising Tide of Foreclosures... 2008
Clifton R. Gruhn FILLING GAPS LEFT BY CONGRESS OR VIOLATING FEDERAL RIGHTS: AN ANALYSIS OF LOCAL ORDINANCES RESTRICTING UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS' ACCESS TO HOUSING 39 University of Miami Inter-American Law Review 529 (Spring/Summer 2008) I. Introduction. 529 II. The Local Ordinances Appear to Affect Immigrants' Rights Under the Fair Housing Act. 535 III. How Local Ordinances Affect Immigrants' Rights Under 42 U.S.C. § 1981, 42 U.S.C. § 1982, and 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 544 A. 42 U.S.C. § 1981. 544 B. 42 U.S.C. § 1982. 546 C. 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 547 IV. Local Ordinances Appear to Affect... 2008
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