AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Stephen Clowney DO FRATERNITIES VIOLATE THE FAIR HOUSING ACT? AN EMPIRICAL STUDY OF SEGREGATION IN THE GREEK ORGANIZATIONS 41 Yale Law and Policy Review 152 (Spring, 2023) Introduction. 153 I. Why Segregation in the Greek System Matters. 160 A. Greeks Dominate the Social Scene. 160 B. The Greeks Dominate Student Government. 164 C. The Greeks Control Access to Alumni Networks. 168 D. A Note on the Structure and Governance of the Greek Community. 169 II. The Greek System is Segregated. 171 A. Methodology. 173 B.... 2023
Zvikomborero Chadambuka EFFICIENCY, EQUITY, AND DATA AS PRIVATE PROPERTY 54 Seton Hall Law Review 1 (2023) Debate about private property often assumes that the economic outcomes from deploying private property will be beneficial. Yet private property has some demerits. These include a tendency towards allocative inefficiency and regressivity, both largely due to its associated monopoly power and reliance on willingness to pay. Given this, the... 2023
Samantha Jumper FAIR QUESTIONS, MAJOR ANSWERS: ROOTING FAIR HOUSING IN AN INCENTIVE-BASED APPROACH TO AVOID MAJOR QUESTIONS CONCERNS 50 Fordham Urban Law Journal 505 (March, 2023) Introduction. 506 I. Histories of Fair Housing and Major Questions. 508 A. From Discrimination to Fair Housing. 509 1. Federal Housing Legislation: A Historical Overview. 510 2. Rule Changes, and Changes, and Changes. 514 B. Questions about Major Questions. 518 1. Non-Delegation Doctrine and Chevron Deference: Pre-2000. 518 2. The Original Major... 2023
Alexandra Staropoli FAIR SHARE HOUSING CENTER 31 Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 315 (2023) Fair Share Housing Center is a nonprofit advocacy organization that uses legal, policy, and community-building strategies to dismantle decades of racial and economic discrimination that excludes people from the opportunity to live in safe, healthy, and affordable housing in New Jersey and nationally. Founded nearly fifty years ago to defend the... 2023
Rubin Danberg Biggs, Patrick Holland FAMILIAL-STATUS DISCRIMINATION: A NEW FRONTIER IN FAIR HOUSING ACT LITIGATION 132 Yale Law Journal 792 (January, 2023) A key provision in the Fair Housing Act (FHA)--the Housing for Older Persons Act (HOPA) exemption--has allowed municipalities to weaponize senior housing to discriminate against families, obstruct affordable housing, and perpetuate race and class segregation. This Note documents the nature, stakes, and origins of this pattern and advances three... 2023
Michael Allan Wolf FEVER CHECK: A STATUS REPORT ON JUDICIAL TREATMENT OF COVID-19-RELATED REAL PROPERTY ISSUES 58 Real Property, Trust and Estate Law Journal 47 (Spring, 2023) Author's Synopsis: It was inevitable that residential landlords would challenge the foreclosure moratoria featured in state and federal COVID-19 emergency orders, regulations, and legislation. At the same time, commercial landlords and tenants are wrestling in court over the question of whether the pandemic and restrictions that governments imposed... 2023
Ariel Roddy, PhD , Kaelyn Sanders , Christian Sarver, PhD , Emily Salisbury, PhD FINANCIAL MARGINALIZATION, HOUSING ACCESS, TRANSPORTATION, AND EMPLOYMENT: INTERSECTIONAL CONSIDERATIONS IN WOMEN'S REENTRY 32-SUM Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy 55 (Summer, 2023) The U.S. carceral system has a vast scope that includes close to two million individuals incarcerated in state, local, and federal facilities, as well as immigration detention centers, juvenile facilities, and other carceral institutions. Additionally, three million people are under probation or parole supervision. In particular, women's system... 2023
Claire Johnson Raba FORFEITING DUE PROCESS: HOW ADJUDICATIVE REFORM FAILS PROPERTY OWNERS 51 Fordham Urban Law Journal 299 (November, 2023) Introduction. 300 A. Methodology. 304 I. Background. 307 A. Civil Asset Forfeiture, A Primer. 307 B. Challenging the Constitutionality of Civil Asset Forfeiture. 312 1. Federal Asset Forfeiture. 312 2. State Forfeiture Statutes. 315 3. Takings Clause. 316 4. Timbs v. Indiana and the Excessive Fines Evaluation. 318 5. Procedural Due Process. 320 II.... 2023
Gary Rhoades FREEDOM OF CHOICE FOR LOW-INCOME RENTERS STILL ELUSIVE AS STATES AND CITIES SCRAMBLE TO CONFRONT HOUSING VOUCHER DISCRIMINATION 48 Human Rights 16 (2023) The Civil Rights Act of 1968, also known as the Fair Housing Act (FHA), will be 55 years old in April 2023. While enforcement of the FHA and many state and local fair housing laws have made inroads on housing discrimination over the last five decades, those laws' promise of freedom to choose our homes and neighborhoods--regardless of our race,... 2023
Skylar Steel FROM DOGHOUSE TO THE DOG'S HOUSE: HOW AMERICAN TRUST LAW IS DEFYING ANIMALS' PROPERTY STATUS 19 Animal & Natural Resource Law Review 187 (June, 2023) American society has evolved its mindset in the way that people think and care about animals. The most significant change is seen with the animals that Americans have opened their homes to. The increased love and care given to these animals has led people to call themselves pet parents and their furry companions, children. This is further... 2023
Amnon Lehavi FROM GLOBAL DATABASES TO GLOBAL NORMS? THE CASE OF CULTURAL PROPERTY LAW 44 University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law 359 (Winter, 2023) This Article identifies the key role that digital databases with global access can play in bridging over significant disparities between national legal systems. Such global databases can be utilized for the resolution of cross-border disputes that involve case-specific challenges of fact-finding, as well as for the interpretation of legal terms... 2023
Emily R. Casey GOING THE EXTRA MILE: EXPANDING THE PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING NEAR TRANSIT ACT 57 University of Richmond Law Review 1369 (Spring, 2023) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 1370 I. History of The Urban/Suburban Divide. 1371 II. Promoting Affordable Housing Near Transit Act: How It Works. 1377 III. Closing the Divide. 1379 A. Models for Success. 1379 1. Denver. 1380 2. Portland. 1384 B. Going the Extra Mile: Expanding the Promoting Affordable Housing Near Transit Act. 1388 C.... 2023
Beth Brodsky HOUSING HIPSTERS: ADAPTING THE SPIRIT OF HIPSTER ANTITRUST TO ADDRESS WEALTH ASYMMETRIES BETWEEN CORPORATE RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES AND COST-BURDENED RESIDENTS 26 University of the District of Columbia Law Review 36 (Spring, 2023) Sean Gotcher, a real estate agent for 11 years, went viral on TikTok with a real estate hypothetical. Gotcher asked how weird society would be if a billion-dollar company collected data on what people would be willing to pay for housing by zip code and then use that information to buy under the market-rate in order to sell above the market rate. He... 2023
Dr. Lucius Couloute , Kacie Snyder HOUSING INSECURITY AMONG PEOPLE WITH CRIMINAL RECORDS: A FOCUS ON LANDLORDS 32-SUM Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy 21 (Summer, 2023) Approximately 600,000 people are released from prisons each year and at least 79 million adults--over one third of the population--now hold some form of a criminal record. Upon formal criminalization, a combination of socioeconomic barriers compound to inhibit one's chances at successfully (re)integrating into society. In particular,... 2023
Tatiana Andia , Nitsan Chorev HOW TO STUDY GLOBAL LAWMAKING: LESSONS FROM INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS AND INTERNATIONAL HEALTH EMERGENCIES 19 Annual Review of Law and Social Science 215 (2023) intellectual property, global law, global health, methodological nationalism, international agreements International agreements on Intellectual Property (IP) have proven to be a good example to study global lawmaking. Beginning by looking at the 1990s Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement and into the negotiation and... 2023
Timothy Scalona HOW UNITED STATES HOUSING POLICIES AND ANTI-HOMELESS CRIMINALIZATION LAWS ENDANGER THE HEALTH AND STABILITY OF UNHOUSED PEOPLE, AND STRATEGIES FOR REFORM 19 Journal of Health & Biomedical Law 390 (2023) In the United States, there are approximately 580,000 people who sleep on the streets every night. Nearly 170,000 homeless families are sleeping outside, couch-surfing, or living in hotels and shelters. Not only do these communities face the constant threat and trauma of homelessness, but they also endure its compounding consequences, such as loss... 2023
Hilary Pearsall IMPROVING THE LONG-TERM CARE LANDSCAPE FOR LGBTQ+ ADULTS THROUGH HOME-AND COMMUNITY-BASED CARE REFORM 15 Drexel Law Review 183 (2023) Across the country, Medicaid-eligible individuals face widespread challenges in accessing appropriate long-term care, but LGBTQ+ elders face unique barriers to care and are especially vulnerable to discrimination, making this issue particularly pressing. In light of historical and continued discrimination against LGBTQ+ individuals across the... 2023
Stevie J. Swanson INDIGNITY PERPETUATED: RACE-BASED HOUSING POST-RECONSTRUCTION TO THE FAIR HOUSING ACT'S IMPACT ON THE DIGITAL AGE: WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE? 22 Connecticut Public Interest Law Journal 126 (Spring-Summer, 2023) C1-2Article Contents I. Introduction. 127 II. History of Race-Based Land Ownership. 130 A. Jim Crow Laws. 130 B. Shelley v. Kraemer and its Implications. 134 III. The Fair Housing Act. 139 A. Application of 3604(c):. 139 1. Who does it apply to?. 139 2. Use of 3604(c) and Publication of Racially Restrictive Covenants. 140 B. Creative Applications... 2023
David Laux INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PROTECTION FOR GENETIC RESOURCES, TRADITIOcAL KNOWLEDGE, AND FOLKLORE: WILL THE ON-GOING WIPO EFFORTS RESULT IN A FORMAL TREATY? 103 Journal of the Patent and Trademark Office Society 353 (October, 2023) C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 354 II. The History of the WIPO Intergovernmental Committee. 354 A. 2001-2008 (IGCs 1-14: The Research Years). 354 B. 2009-2017 (IGCs 15-35: Text-based Negotiations). 358 C. 2018-Present (IGCs 36-47: Recent Negotiations and a Diplomatic Conference). 361 III. Current Status of Negotiations in the Text-based... 2023
Taorui Guan INVESTORS' PERSPECTIVE ON INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY FINANCING 54 Seton Hall Law Review 439 (2023) The intellectual property system is generally considered to be a legal system that promotes innovation. But the ways through which it achieves this goal are still not entirely clear. Conventional intellectual property theories tend to describe the system's role in promoting innovation as providing creators with incentives to create and... 2023
Neil Fulton JOHN LEWIS AND THE POLITICS OF LOVE JON MECHAM, HIS TRUTH IS MARCHING ON: JOHN LEWIS AND THE POWER OF HOPE. JOHN MEACHAM. RANDOM HOUSE, 2020. 354 PP. (ISBN-9781984855022; ISBN-13:9781984855039) 68 South Dakota Law Review 35 (2023) What if political thought and action stood on a foundation of universal love? Many, if not most, would be skeptical of such a premise. Current circumstances certainly justify such skepticism. Congressman John Lewis was not only not skeptical of the premise of a politics of love; he built his life on it. He repeatedly risked his life for it, in... 2023
Craig Anthony (Tony) Arnold , Frank Bencomo-Suarez , Pierce Stevenson , Elijah Beau Eisert , Henna Khan , Rachel Utz , Rebecca Wells-Gonzalez JUSTICE, RESILIENCE, AND DISRUPTIVE HISTORIES: A SOUTH FLORIDA CASE STUDY 34 Colorado Environmental Law Journal 213 (Spring, 2023) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 214 II. Social-Ecological Resilience and the Role of Justice. 217 III. Resilience Justice and Disruptive Histories. 226 IV. The Florida Everglades and Tribal Water Justice. 229 A. The Tribes. 229 B. The Everglades. 234 C. Tribal Water-Justice Struggles. 238 V. Miami and Climate Justice. 249 VI. Conclusion. 262 2023
  KEEPING CURRENT--PROPERTY 37-APR Probate and Property 16 (March/April, 2023) ADVERSE POSSESSION: Repudiation of owner's title is not required where adverse claim begins with easement and hostile acts exceed those rights. The Dowlings purchased property located on a peninsula protruding into Long Island Sound from the Bradleys for $2.6 million. All the abutting owners in the area had a common right-of-way easement over a... 2023
  KEEPING CURRENT--PROPERTY 37-DEC Probate and Property 10 (November/December, 2023) ANNEXATION: Annexation agreement binds purchaser who acquires only part of annexed subdivision. In 2003, the Village of Kirkland and a landowner entered into an annexation agreement, providing that the village would annex 114 acres of land to be developed as a residential subdivision. The recorded agreement was executed under the Illinois Municipal... 2023
  KEEPING CURRENT--PROPERTY 37-FEB Probate and Property 20 (January/February, 2023) BROKERS: Construction contractor who is not licensed as broker is not entitled to compensation for finding buyer for property. Choice Homes LLC (Choice), a construction contractor, was owned by two individuals who were the only employees. Choice delegated all office work and actual construction to subcontractors, who were, like the owners,... 2023
  KEEPING CURRENT--PROPERTY 37-JUN Probate and Property 18 (May/June, 2023) Keeping Current--Property offers a look at selected recent cases, literature, and legislation. The editors of Probate & Property welcome suggestions and contributions from readers. ADVERSE POSSESSION: Mere failure to object to adverse use does not establish neighborly accommodation to defeat hostility. Kudar and Morgan were neighbors. Not knowing... 2023
Rose Wehrman KEEPING FERRIS OUT OF FOSTER CARE: REFORMING THE JJDPA TO PREVENT HOME REMOVALS BASED ON TRUANCY 57 Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems 161 (Fall, 2023) Truancy is directly correlated with negative educational and life outcomes for students. The state exacerbates these negative effects when it removes students from their homes for truancy. Far from addressing the underlying causes of truancy, home removals--whether into secure or non-secure placements--cause devastating harm. The Juvenile Justice... 2023
Maeve Glass KILLING PRECEDENT: THE SLAUGHTER-HOUSE CONSTITUTION 123 Columbia Law Review 1135 (May, 2023) This Essay offers a revisionist account of the Slaughter-House Cases. It argues that the opinion's primary significance lies not in its gutting of the Privileges or Immunities Clause but in its omission of a people's archive of slavery. Decades before the decision, Black abolitionists began compiling the testimonies of refugees who had fled... 2023
Nicholas Blomley , Alexandra Flynn , Marie-Ève Sylvestre , Nicholas Olson LAW, URBAN SPACE, AND PRECARIOUS PROPERTY: THE GOVERNANCE OF POOR PEOPLE'S POSSESSIONS 50 Fordham Urban Law Journal 223 (February, 2023) Introduction. 224 I. Precariously Housed People Must Negotiate Multiple Legal Spaces. 226 II. Routine Seizure and Destruction of Belongings Occurs by Multiple Actors. 228 III. Precariously Housed People Lack Meaningful and Accessible Remedies. 230 IV. The Taking and Destruction of Poor People's Belongings Perpetuates Vulnerability and Poverty. 234... 2023
Jennie A. Hill LEGITIMATE STATE INTEREST OR EDUCATIONAL CENSORSHIP: THE CHILLING EFFECT OF OKLAHOMA HOUSE BILL 1775 75 Oklahoma Law Review 385 (Winter, 2023) The Oklahoma Legislature crawls into classrooms way too much and tells classroom teachers, which we are short on by the way, what they can and can't do .. [This bill] reeks of something that is not local . and that we do not need to be addressing in this building. The bill--Oklahoma House Bill 1775--originally created emergency medical... 2023
Heather Latino LEVERAGING HOUSING PROGRAMS: ENSURING THAT FOOD ACCESS INVESTMENTS DO NOT DISPLACE PEOPLE 19 Journal of Food Law & Policy 58 (Spring, 2023) I see one-third of a nation ill housed, ill clad, ill nourished .. The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, January 20, 1937 In September 2022, the Biden-Harris Administration convened a White House... 2023
Erica Witter MAKING AMENDS: LOCALIZING AND IMPLEMENTING HOUSING REPARATION PROGRAMS FOR AFRICAN AMERICANS AFFECTED BY DISCRIMINATORY HOUSING POLICIES 15 Drexel Law Review 509 (2023) In Philadelphia, there is a significant gap in African American home ownership that has contributed to many of the problems that African American residents face today. Decreased industrialization, high poverty rates, crime, and loss in property values are direct consequences of housing discrimination by state and private actors. This Note... 2023
Moira O'Neill, Eric Biber, Nicholas J. Marantz MEASURING LOCAL POLICY TO ADVANCE FAIR HOUSING AND CLIMATE GOALS THROUGH A COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENT OF LAND USE ENTITLEMENTS 50 Pepperdine Law Review 505 (March, 2023) California's legislature has passed several laws that intervene in local land-use regulation in order to increase desperately needed housing production-- particularly affordable housing production. Some of these new laws expand local reporting requirements concerning zoning and planning laws, and the application of those laws apply to proposed... 2023
Justin Kennedy METAVERSE PROPERTY: ADVOCATING FOR THE REGULATION OF METAVERSE LAND AND PROPERTY THROUGH A REAL ESTATE LEGAL REGIME 17 Ohio State Business Law Journal 323 (2023) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 324 II. History and Background. 326 A. What is the Metaverse?. 326 B. How to Purchase a Piece of Property in the Metaverse. 328 C. Pitfalls of Metaverse Real Estate Transfers and Structure. 329 III. How Intellectual Property Law Currently Reigns Over the Metaverse. 330 A. Intellectual Property Law Bestows Some... 2023
Andy Taylor MUCH DISPUTE ABOUT NOTHING? A CRITICAL EXAMINATION OF THE BACKLASH AGAINST INVESTMENT TREATY ARBITRATION IN INTERNATIONAL INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY DISPUTES 14 Cybaris an Intellectual Property Law Review 33 (2023) C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction 34 II. ISDS: Origins, Growth & Criticism 36 A. Origins of ISDS 36 B. Growth of ISDS 39 C. Backlash Against ISDS 42 D. Criticism of ISDS in IP Disputes 46 III. Notable Investor-State IP Disputes 49 A. Patents: Eli Lilly v. Canada 49 B. Trademarks: Philip Morris v. Uruguay 55 IV. Argument 58 A. ISDS: An... 2023
Allison Roy Kawachi MUNICIPAL FAIR HOUSING ACT LITIGATION AND REPARATIONS 69 UCLA Law Review 1322 (January, 2023) L1-2TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction. 1324 I. Reparations Litigation: What It Is and Why It Fails. 1327 A. What Are Reparations?. 1327 1. Definition. 1327 2. History. 1330 3. Goals. 1334 a. Economic Goals. 1334 b. Moral Goals. 1336 B. Reparations and Litigation. 1337 1. The Role of Litigation. 1337 2. Overview of Key Reparations Cases. 1339 a.... 2023
Bella Miller MY UTERUS, MY CHOICE: ABORTION BANS AND PROPERTY INTERESTS IN THE FEMALE BODY 64 Boston College Law Review 2131 (November, 2023) Abstract: For fifty years, people who can become pregnant have relied on the ability to access abortions as a part of ordinary, safe, and quality medical care. Abortions are low-risk medical procedures that provide people who can become pregnant with the ability to control their health and well-being. The Supreme Court stripped women of their... 2023
Angela R. Riley NATIVE NATIONS AND TRIBAL CULTURAL PROPERTY LAW 16 Landslide 22 (September/October, 2023) The world is experiencing a decolonization movement, as former colonies and Indigenous Peoples seek to regain cultural identities and political power that was stripped in the colonial period. This endeavor has particular resonance for Indigenous Peoples, who, as the New York Times recently reported, are increasingly calling on courts and... 2023
Eric R. Claeys NATURAL PROPERTY RIGHTS: A REPLY 9 Texas A&M Journal of Property Law 757 (5/28/2023) This Reply concludes the symposium hosted by the Texas A&M University Journal of Property Law on the author's forthcoming book Natural Property Rights. The Reply shows how natural law and rights apply to a wide range of doctrinal examples raised in this symposium--including business associations, correlative oil rights, timber extraction, sinking... 2023
Eric R. Claeys NATURAL PROPERTY RIGHTS: AN INTRODUCTION 9 Texas A&M Journal of Property Law 415 (5/28/2023) This Article introduces a symposium hosted by the Texas A&M University Journal of Property Law. The symposium is on a forthcoming book, and in that book the author introduces and defends a theory of property relying on labor, natural rights, and mine-run principles of natural law. Parts I and II of the Article preview the main claims of the book,... 2023
Monika U. Ehrman NATURAL RESOURCE PROPERTY CUSTOMS 41 UCLA Journal of Environmental Law & Policy 1 (2023) This Article examines the role that property customs played in the development of American mining law. It analyzes how small communities of international miners developed systems of property governance and how those customary systems led to the shaping of mineral ownership and mining legislation in America. Natural resource communities often rely... 2023
Katelin O'Connor NO DOGS ALLOWED (WITHOUT A WARRANT): EXPANDING THE FOURTH AMENDMENT SANCTITY OF THE HOME TO INTERIOR THRESHOLD SEARCHES FOR TENANTS IN MULTIUNIT DWELLINGS-UNITED STATES v. MATHEWS 101 Nebraska Law Review 585 (2023) C1-2TABLE OF CONTENTS I. Introduction. 586 II. The History of Fourth Amendment Privacy Protections. 589 A. Unconstitutional Search Requires Physical Intrusion--Common-Law Trespassory Test. 589 B. Unconstitutional Search Without Physical Intrusion--Reasonable-Expectation-of-Privacy Test. 592 III. Circuit Split. 596 A. Majority Approach. 596 B.... 2023
  NOBODY HAS A "CORNER ON THE MARKET": THE COLLABORATIVE USE OF BOTH IN-HOUSE COUNSEL AND OUTSIDE COUNSEL 22 Journal of International Business and Law 34 (Winter, 2023) In business lawyering, there is no single prescription for when to use in-house counsel or outside counsel. Many companies employ both types of counsel. Each brings different advantages to the client and the transaction in issue. Notwithstanding historical resistance in the legal industry about the propriety of deeming in-house counsel as veritable... 2023
Jack Duffley ON THIN ICE: FIXING THE COOK COUNTY PROPERTY TAX DIVIDE 96 Chicago-Kent Law Review 283 (2023) For Cook County, the property tax is one of the most important revenue sources. The County is divided into numerous taxing districts, like school, library, or municipality districts, all of which rely heavily on property tax revenue. Every year, each district in Cook County submits a property tax levy based on its projected expenditures. In 2018,... 2023
Julie Gilgoff OPPORTUNITY TO PURCHASE POLICIES: PRESERVING THE AFFORDABILITY OF MANUFACTURED HOME COMMUNITIES 68 Villanova Law Review 405 (2023) Manufactured homes, otherwise known as mobile homes, are one of the last vestiges of truly affordable housing in the United States. With funding drying up for government-subsidized rental programs, manufactured homes are an attractive form of naturally occurring affordable housing that enable low-income communities to attain homeownership and... 2023
Robin Feldman PATENTS AS PROPERTY FOR THE TAKINGS 12 NYU Journal of Intellectual Property and Entertainment Law 198 (Spring, 2023) The Fifth Amendment's Compensation Clause contains only a few simple words: nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation. Yet these simple words have confounded legal minds for over 200 years, and as Congress has contemplated various patent law reforms in recent decades, the specter of the Fifth Amendment looms on... 2023
Rachel F. Moran PERSONHOOD, PROPERTY, AND PUBLIC EDUCATION: THE CASE OF PLYLER v. DOE 123 Columbia Law Review 1271 (June, 2023) Property law is having a moment, one that is getting education scholars' attention. Progressive scholars are retooling the concepts of ownership and entitlement to incorporate norms of equality and inclusion. Some argue that property law can even secure access to public education despite the U.S. Supreme Court's longstanding refusal to recognize a... 2023
Maeve Hyer PHYSICAL SPORTS NEEDING VIRTUAL BOUNDARIES? AN ANALYSIS OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ISSUES ARISING FROM SPORT NFTS 30 Jeffrey S. Moorad Sports Law Journal 91 (2023) Sports have long been understood to have loyal and loving fans. Sporting memorabilia generates roughly $5.4 billion annually. Whether player's jerseys or signed trading cards, the sports industry is no stranger to big spenders for coveted mementos from historic games. The metaverse is a niche concept of the tech world that recently exploded in... 2023
Carolyn Mitchell PLAYING CATCH-UP: LAWS PROTECTING CULTURAL PROPERTY IN THE UNITED STATES NEED AN UPDATE 97 Tulane Law Review Online 1 (June, 2023) I. Introduction. 2 II. Historical Attempts at Creating Effective Laws to Protect Cultural Property. 4 A. The Evolution of International Laws Protecting Cultural Property. 4 B. How Responsive Cultural Property Laws Are to Concomitant Societal Awareness. 11 III. Laws Protecting Cultural Property in the United States. 13 IV. How the United States... 2023
Andrea Uhlig , William Bellamy , Megan Amos , Donna Bernstein , Jennifer Brause , Erin Morin , Anne Corrigan , Frank Curriero , Paul Locke PREVENTING EVICTION AND HOUSING LOSS: TAKING ADVANTAGE OF A ONE HEALTH APPROACH AND THE HUMAN-COMPANION ANIMAL BOND 26 Journal of Health Care Law and Policy 181 (2023) Housing loss is at epidemic proportions in the United States, especially in cities like Baltimore, Maryland. Baltimore has a high rate of housing eviction and housing loss. According to a report released by the Public Justice Center, an average of 6,880 evictions have occurred annually in the city since 2012. Eviction rates tend to be high among... 2023
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