| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
| Ryan Jensen |
REFORMING PROPERTY TAXATION TO SOLVE CALIFORNIA'S HOUSING DEFICIT |
61 California Western Law Review 535 (Spring, 2025) |
C1-3Table of Contents L1-2Introduction . L3536 I. The Problem: California is Not Building Enough Housing. 542 A. Why Remedies Have Failed. 544 1. NIMBY Group Resistance. 547 2. Zoning, Development Fees, and CEQA. 549 3. Traditional Property Taxation and Proposition 13. 555 II. Challenges and Changes to Proposition 13. 561 III. Land Value Taxation... |
2025 |
| Julie Gilgoff |
REFRAMING HOMELESSNESS FROM A HOUSING PERSPECTIVE |
36 Experience 10 (October/November, 2025) |
Learn more about the U.S. affordable housing crisis, comparing the country's strategy of housing production to international models. Recent studies have tracked a rising rate of homelessness even among those with steady employment in certain U.S. jurisdictions. The Housing First model provides permanent supportive housing to individuals... |
2025 |
| Bella Urban |
SAFEGUARDING AMERICAN INGENUITY: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE REGIMES IN MITIGATING CHINESE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY THEFT |
42 Arizona Journal of International and Comparative Law 193 (2025) |
C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 194 II. Background. 196 A. The History of Trade in the United States. 196 B. The Creation of the WTO. 199 C. The Creation of Phase One. 203 1. Intellectual Property Protections Under Phase One. 205 III. Comparison. 208 A. Strengths of the WTO Legislation. 208 B. Weaknesses of the WTO Legislation. 210 C.... |
2025 |
| Lucas E. Muller |
SAFETY OR SHELTER: THE COSTS AND BENEFITS OF EXCLUDING DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SHELTERS FROM THE FAIR HOUSING ACT |
15 Arizona Journal of Environmental Law & Policy 227 (Summer, 2025) |
Following the Supreme Court's decision in Grants Pass v. Johnson, the options for survivors of domestic violence to escape abusive situations are fewer than ever. Survivors may now be forced to choose between remaining in place or fleeing to a domestic violence shelter, possibly populated by those who resemble their abuser. To remedy this choice... |
2025 |
| Reilly E. Knorr |
SAVING THE AMERICAN DREAM: ADAPTING ANTI-CORPORATE FARMING LAWS TO PROTECT SINGLE-FAMILY HOUSING |
125 Columbia Law Review 657 (April, 2025) |
Throughout the twentieth century, several states adopted a new type of laws: Anti-Corporate Farming (ACF) laws. These laws generally prohibit corporations from owning farmland or engaging in the business of farming. They were originally intended to encourage and protect the family farm as a basic economic unit and insure it as the most socially... |
2025 |
| Devon W. Carbado , Russell K. Robinson |
SFFA: BAKKE'S CHICKENS COMING HOME TO ROOST |
113 California Law Review 1031 (June, 2025) |
The Supreme Court's decision in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard will undoubtedly generate enormous debate. Much of that debate will likely focus on whether Chief Justice Roberts effectively overruled the very precedent he purported to apply. Whether the Chief Justice evidenced fidelity to the affirmative action case law he inherited is not... |
2025 |
| Prof. Steven Virgil |
SHARED EQUITY OWNERSHIP MODELS AS A STRATEGY TO EXPAND ACCESS TO AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP |
60 Wake Forest Law Review 867 (2025) |
Alternative ownership arrangements are being used across the United States to expand access to affordable housing. This paper provides an overview of one such alternative: Limited Equity Cooperatives. Following a discussion of shared ownership models, practical considerations are described before a series of policy recommendations are outlined.... |
2025 |
| Joseph Scholten |
STATE STATUTES TO SOLVE THE HOUSING CRISIS |
94 UMKC Law Review 191 (Fall, 2025) |
What if every American family could afford a place to live? The idea sounds crazy in 2024, when the median home price stands at $412,000 and rents have increased 26 percent since 2020 to their highest levels ever. The evidence of these problems is apparent in every major U.S. city, where homelessness has reached new heights. The common cause of... |
2025 |
| Nair M. Banks III |
STOP BLAMING FOREIGNERS FOR YOUR HOUSING MARKET: WHY PROHIBITIONS AGAINST FOREIGN PROPERTY OWNERSHIP WON'T SOLVE THE GLOBAL HOUSING CRISIS |
58 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 485 (March, 2025) |
In 2025, the global housing crisis continues to worsen alongside the growing trend of countries enacting restrictions against foreign property ownership. In early 2024, as a response to the affordable housing exigency, Canada extended its Prohibition on the Purchase of Residential Property by Non-Canadians Act from the initial two-year effective... |
2025 |
| Kathleen Collins |
TAKING BACK THE TAKINGS CLAUSE: THE CASE FOR COMPENSATING INNOCENT PROPERTY OWNERS CAUGHT IN THE CROSSFIRE OF POLICE ACTIVITY |
66 William and Mary Law Review 1613 (May, 2025) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 1615 I. The History of Takings, the Police Power, and the Necessity Exception. 1618 A. The Role of Physical Takings Within Takings Clause Jurisprudence. 1619 B. The Emergence of Regulatory Takings. 1621 C. The Police Power-Eminent Domain Continuum and the Nuisance Exception. 1624 D. The Public Necessity... |
2025 |
| Erica Martinez |
TEXAS PROPERTY OWNER RIGHTS AND THE FUTURE OF SENATE BILL 2038-LAND DEVELOPMENT SHIFT IN TEXAS |
57 Saint Mary's Law Journal 155 (2025) |
I. Introduction. 156 A. Historical Background. 157 B. Historical Tensions Between Urban Expansion and Rural Rights--Balancing of Power Dispute. 159 C. Legal Uncertainty and Potential Ramifications for Ongoing Legal Disputes. 162 D. Municipal Control over Urban Planning and Land Development in ETJs. 164 E. Involuntary Annexation. 165 II. Senate Bill... |
2025 |
| Peter K. Yu |
THE COMPLEX INTERPLAY BETWEEN INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND THE RIGHT TO SCIENCE |
105 Boston University Law Review 705 (April, 2025) |
This Article examines the complex interplay between intellectual property and the right to enjoy the benefits of scientific progress and its applications (the right to science). It begins by documenting the historical evolution of this right, including its textual language, internal structure, and authoritative interpretation. This Article then... |
2025 |
| Daniel Burke |
THE CRITICAL IMPORTANCE OF PROJECT-BASED SECTION 8 AND PROJECT-BASED VOUCHERS IN ADVANCING HOUSING CHOICE MOBILITY |
33 Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 199 (2025) |
Introduction. 200 I. Overview of Key Federal Housing Rental Subsidy Programs. 202 A. Public Housing. 202 B. The Project-Based Section 8 Program. 203 C. The Housing Choice Voucher Program. 204 D. The Project-Based Voucher Program. 205 E. The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program. 206 II. A Review of Choice Mobility Programs: The Gautreaux Program... |
2025 |
| Dore Feith |
THE FIRST "STATE SPONSOR OF MASS IP THEFT": CHINA, SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY, AND UPHOLDING AMERICANS' INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS |
2024 Columbia Business Law Review 841 (2025) |
The government of China has long orchestrated a massive campaign to steal intellectual property (IP) from Americans, but few victims have been able to seek redress through civil litigation. A key reason is that U.S. law does not recognize a foreign government's vicarious liability for such thefts. Even when liability can be established, China's... |
2025 |
| Dore Feith |
THE FIRST "STATE SPONSOR OF MASS IP THEFT": CHINA, SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY, AND UPHOLDING AMERICANS' INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS |
2024 Columbia Business Law Review 825 (2025) |
The government of China has long orchestrated a massive campaign to steal intellectual property (IP) from Americans, but few victims have been able to seek redress through civil litigation. A key reason is that U.S. law does not recognize a foreign government's vicarious liability for such thefts. Even when liability can be established, China's... |
2025 |
| Riley N. Keelty , Walter E. Block |
THE HOUSING CRISIS IN THE UNITED STATES |
39-JUN Probate and Property 36 (May/June, 2025) |
The housing crisis has become a significant problem in the United States, with millions of Americans struggling to find stable and affordable housing because of the increasing prices of homes and rents stemming from a chronic shortage of housing, high costs of land and construction, restrictive zoning laws, rent control, and public housing. Joseph... |
2025 |
| Robert A. Destro |
THE HUMAN DIMENSION OF "HOME" |
74 Catholic University Law Review 600 (Fall, 2025) |
All societies provide a legal framework that protects the pivotal functions of home and family. None provide a clear legal definition of home. Nor, this article argues, can they. Home is a concept rooted in the lived experience of human persons. In this article, the second in a series, the author employs the human dimension (HDIM) concept,... |
2025 |
| Michele Estrin Gilman |
THE IMPACT OF PROPTECH AND THE DATAFICATION OF REAL ESTATE ON THE HUMAN RIGHT TO HOUSING |
9 Georgetown Law Technology Review 444 (2025) |
Proptech is undermining the human right to housing. Proptech is a term of art for the digital transformation of the real estate industry. It includes a range of real estate businesses engaged in development, financing, construction, management, and more. Proptech's boosters promise frictionless and efficient housing markets. However, Proptech... |
2025 |
| Mary Crossley |
THE LAYERED HARMS OF NURSING HOME SEGREGATION |
18 Saint Louis University Journal of Health Law & Policy 275 (2025) |
This Essay explores several dimensions of how segregation, separation, and shielding from view permit and contribute to the ethically problematic state of nursing home care in the United States. A quarter of a century ago, the Supreme Court recognized in the Olmstead decision that institutional care can function to segregate disabled people... |
2025 |
| Joel E. Gillison |
THE LEGAL INVINCIBILITY OF EXCLUSIONARY ZONING AND THE INEVITABILITY OF A HOUSING SHORTAGE IN THE OLD NORTH STATE |
104 North Carolina Law Review 203 (December, 2025) |
North Carolina is facing an unprecedented housing affordability crisis, with housing prices up more than thirty percent between 2010 and 2022. This problem is exacerbated by the fact that North Carolina has been the third-fastest-growing state over that time span. For likely the first time in the state's history, the rate of new population growth... |
2025 |
| Benjamin Duddy |
THE LITIGATOR'S GUIDE TO SHORT-TERM RENTAL OPPOSITION |
94 Mississippi Law Journal 1015 (2025) |
Introduction. 1016 I. Short-Term Rentals in the Legal Domain. 1018 A. The Good, the Bad, and the General History. 1018 B. An Approach Has Formed: Houses Divided. 1021 C. Cracks in the Approach. 1024 II. Reevaluating the Approach through a Doctrinal Survey. 1027 A. Property Law. 1027 B. Contract Law. 1029 C. Tax Law. 1030 D. Zoning Law. 1031 E.... |
2025 |
| Steve P. Calandrillo , Kelsey Dunn |
THE NEW REDLINING: HOW PROGRESSIVE POLICIES RESTRICT THE DEVELOPMENT OF HOUSING SUPPLY AND PERPETUATE AMERICA'S RACIST PROPERTY LAW PAST |
77 Florida Law Review 1085 (May, 2025) |
Recent scholarship has exposed America's racist property law past. During the twentieth century, decades of deliberate state-sponsored discrimination (i.e., Redlining) made homeownership--and the accumulation of wealth--more difficult for people of color. In 1948, the Supreme Court outlawed these practices in the seminal case, Shelley v. Kraemer.... |
2025 |
| Samantha Rhodes |
THE PARALLELS IN THE REPATRIATION OF CULTURAL PROPERTY: HOW THE HOLOCAUST EXPROPRIATED ART RECOVERY ACT PROVIDES A FRAMEWORK FOR A MORE EFFECTIVE NATIVE AMERICAN GRAVE PROTECTION AND REPATRIATION ACT |
30 Roger Williams University Law Review 127 (Winter, 2025) |
Imagine walking through the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian, and you come upon an exhibit with a small, humanlike, ceramic figurine. The figure is approximately two feet tall and sixteen inches wide. It has a hunched back, its hands are on its knees, and is in a half-squatting position. The figure's face is wide and appears to... |
2025 |
| Noah M. Kazis |
THE RADICAL FAIR HOUSING ACT |
111 Virginia Law Review 491 (May, 2025) |
This Article uncovers the radical logic at the core of the Fair Housing Act (FHA). It is a law which can question and remake the underlying structure of housing markets, not just police individual transactions within those markets. The FHA is conventionally held to use the same understanding of discrimination as the Civil Rights Act's... |
2025 |
| John G. Sprankling |
THE RIGHT TO ACQUIRE PROPERTY |
75 American University Law Review 209 (October, 2025) |
Can government prohibit the acquisition of all types of property? The intuitive answer to this question is no. But why? Is there a constitutional right to acquire property? And, if so, how does it apply if government merely prohibits acquisition of a certain type of property, such as contraceptives? The Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments... |
2025 |
| Elisabell Laura Velázquez |
THE ROLE OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY IN THE GLOBAL FASHION INDUSTRY: COUNTERFEITING AND TRADEMARK ENFORCEMENT |
29 University of San Francisco Intellectual Property and 164 Technology Law Journal(Spring, 2025) |
With the rise of e-commerce and digital platforms, online markets have facilitated access to counterfeit goods. The accessibility to counterfeit fashion goods has posed challenges to the global fashion industry. This article discusses the historical evolution of trademark law as it relates to fashion on a domestic and international level. Moreover,... |
2025 |
| Gary DeYoung |
THE STATE GIVETH, THE STATE TAKETH AWAY: STATE LAW, LOCAL HOUSING PRODUCTION, AND THE RIGHT TO APPEAL |
30 Suffolk Journal of Trial and Appellate Advocacy 77 (2024-2025) |
Regulations, the wisdom, necessity and validity of which, as applied to existing conditions, are so apparent that they are now uniformly sustained, a century ago, or even half a century ago, probably would have been rejected as arbitrary and oppressive. Such regulations are sustained, under the complex conditions of our day, for reasons analogous... |
2025 |
| Patrick M. Denny |
THE TIMES THEY MAY BE A--CHANGIN': A LOOK INTO CUBA'S FUTURE FOR PROPERTY RIGHTS AND RESTITUTION THROUGH 3 LENSES |
57 University of Miami Inter-American Law Review 145 (Fall, 2025) |
After the 1959 Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro took power and instituted a new regime that formed itself into a communist stronghold of the global south. With this new government came curtailment of private property rights, effectuated in government confiscation and limitation in private ownership opportunity. As many Cubans and foreign... |
2025 |
| Jade A. Craig |
THE TRAFFICANTE ROUTE: FAIR HOUSING LAW AND THE ROAD TO RACIAL RECONCILIATION |
60 Wake Forest Law Review 821 (2025) |
This Article draws on the story of Trafficante v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., one of the earliest cases in which the U.S. Supreme Court interpreted the Fair Housing Act of 1968. Paul Trafficante, one of the plaintiffs, was a white tenant of a large apartment complex in San Francisco who discovered that the landlord was engaging in systematic... |
2025 |
| Zachary E. Stewart |
THE UNIFORM PARTITION OF HEIRS PROPERTY ACT |
52 Michigan Real Property Review 19 (Spring, 2025) |
At some point in most attorneys' careers, a client who co-owns property with other persons calls about the co-owners' disagreement over the responsibilities for, and the disposition of, that property. One solution to these disagreements, so long as the potential client's ownership meets the requirements, is a partition action. Generally, [a]n... |
2025 |
| Zachary E. Stewart |
THE UNIFORM PARTITION OF HEIRS PROPERTY ACT |
52 Michigan Real Property Review 19 (Spring, 2025) |
At some point in most attorneys' careers, a client who co-owns property with other persons calls about the co-owners' disagreement over the responsibilities for, and the disposition of, that property. One solution to these disagreements, so long as the potential client's ownership meets the requirements, is a partition action. Generally, [a]n... |
2025 |
| Sara K. Van Norman |
THE WAY BACK HOME: THE INDIAN LAND TENURE FOUNDATION'S SURVEY OF TRIBAL LAND-BACK PROJECTS ACROSS THE UNITED STATES |
53 Urban Lawyer 7 (January, 2025) |
There are many analyses of the violent and centuries-long American project to take Indian lands from tribes. There are also concerted and high-profile federal initiatives, driven by tribal partnership, lobbying, and litigation, that have arisen over the past several decades that serve to facilitate consolidation and reacquisition of tribal lands.... |
2025 |
| Karen E. Woody, Joshua L. Clardy |
TITLE 18'S PROPERTY CONUNDRUM |
78 SMU Law Review 157 (Winter, 2025) |
Property, in legal terms, carries significant weight. Once an object is heralded as property, that object becomes a step closer to being afforded the protections of the Constitution, offered equitable remedies at a court's disposal, or even subjected to taxation by the state or federal government. Defining an object as property also puts it... |
2025 |
| Nat Jordan |
TOWARD AN ECONOMIC FAIR HOUSING ACT |
123 Michigan Law Review 757 (February, 2025) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 758 I. Applying an EFHA to Antidiscrimination Law. 764 A. The Promise--and Problems--of Fair Housing. 764 B. Adding Income. 765 1. Disparate Treatment. 768 a. But-For Causation. 770 b. Motivating-Factor Causation. 771 c. The Same Decision Defense. 773 2. Disparate Impact. 774 a. Step One: The Prima Facie Case.... |
2025 |
| Sara Evans |
TRADEMARKING TERROIR: GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS AS A FORM OF CULTURAL PROPERTY IN THE U.S.-EU TRADE WAR |
26 Chicago Journal of International Law 375 (Summer, 2025) |
Geographical indications (GIs) designating wines, spirits, and agricultural products have been the subject of a trade war between the U.S. and EU for several decades. The American legal regime often denies European producers exclusive rights to use GIs in the American market because U.S. authorities consider many European terms generic. As a... |
2025 |
| Carol M. Rose |
TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE AND THE LIMITS OF PROPERTY |
66 Harvard International Law Journal 81 (Summer, 2025) |
Indigenous and traditional groups have generated a great variety of creative and inventive products and processes, collectively known as Traditional Knowledge (TK). Modern travel and communication have opened TK to outsiders, but some outsiders may copy or otherwise appropriate TK from the creating communities without consent or compensation.... |
2025 |
| Nicholas J. Stamates |
TRIBAL LEGAL LICENSING OF ATTORNEYS, HOUSE COUNSEL STATUS, AND THE OPPORTUNITY TO REDEFINE THE JD PREFERRED POSITION AND THE ENTIRE LAWYER ECOSYSTEM |
30 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 103 (Spring, 2025) |
The recognized right of Indian Tribes to license has been a known reality dating back to the Supreme Court's ruling in Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S. 515 (1832) where state law was found inapplicable on the lands of the Cherokee. However, the modern implications of tribal licensing and regulation have only just begun to be explored in the context of... |
2025 |
| Nicholas M. O'Donnell |
TURNABOUT IS FOUL PLAY: SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY AND CULTURAL PROPERTY CLAIMS |
28 Chapman Law Review 553 (Spring, 2025) |
I. Introduction. 555 II. Sovereign Immunity Before 1976. 555 III. Congress Confers Immunity Determinations Exclusively to the Judiciary. 556 IV. Sovereign Immunity and Cultural Property. 561 V. Slamming the Courthouse Doors Closed. 569 VI. The Revenge of the Sovereigns. 577 VII. Restoring the Status Intended by Congress. 588 |
2025 |
| Jonathan L. Entin |
USING COMMON LAW PROPERTY DOCTRINE TO ADVANCE SOCIAL JUSTICE |
24 Connecticut Public Interest Law Journal 218 (2024-2025) |
Cases involving estates in land and future interests might not qualify as part of the dogs and crud that members of the Supreme Court who got on the outs with Chief Justice Warren Burger were likely to be assigned. But, they might seem unattractive to lawyers and judges who must make sense of a monstrously complex and mysterious body of law.... |
2025 |
| Eric Strain |
WASHINGTON'S CRIME FREE RENTAL HOUSING PROGRAMS: A TWO-TIER HOUSING REGIME |
23 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 363 (Spring, 2025) |
Washington's Crime Free Rental Housing Programs (CFRHPs) create an unlawful, two-tiered renter-justice system that systemically criminalizes and dispossesses marginalized communities from the stable housing promised to them by the Washington legislature. While CFRHPs take various forms around the country, collection of laws and ordinances... |
2025 |
| Meredith M. Render |
WASTE, PROPERTY, AND USELESS THINGS |
138 Harvard Law Review 1260 (March, 2025) |
C1-2CONTENTS Introduction. 1261 I. Useless Things in an Overcrowded World. 1268 II. Property Law and Waste. 1274 A. The Lockean Imperative Against Waste. 1275 B. The Imperative Against Waste in American Property Law. 1289 1. Adverse Possession as Antiwaste. 1296 2. The Rules of Abandonment as Antiwaste. 1299 C. Planned Obsolescence and the... |
2025 |
| Mitchell F. Crusto |
WHAT IS PROPERTY?: A LIBERTARIAN PERSPECTIVE OF NAME, IMAGE, AND LIKENESS |
16 Harvard Journal of Sports & Entertainment Law 59 (Winter, 2025) |
C1-3CONTENTS Introduction. 60 A. Players Can't Get Paid.. 61 B. Conundrum. 66 C. Roadmap. 70 I. Conundrum. 76 A. History of NIL Law. 76 B. NIL Law Based on a Right of Publicity. 78 C. Louisiana's Representative Statute. 84 D. Right of Publicity is Deficient. 95 II. Name, Image, and Likeness as Property Act. 96 III. Justification. 98 A.... |
2025 |
| Charlotte Saltzman |
WHEN THE TAXPAYERS ARE NOT INNOCENT: THE NEED FOR PUNITIVE DAMAGES AGAINST MUNICIPALITIES UNDER THE FAIR HOUSING ACT |
94 Fordham Law Review 759 (November, 2025) |
Combatting housing discrimination by municipalities is a core function of the Fair Housing Act (FHA). Courts disagree, however, as to whether punitive damages can be awarded against municipal defendants. The purpose of this Note is twofold. First, it compares the Second Circuit's recent decision in Gilead Community Services, Inc. v. Town of... |
2025 |
| Summer Durant |
WHITENESS AS PROPERTY BY PROXY: HOW AFFIRMATIVE ACTION'S END MARKS THE BEGINNING OF A CRUCIAL RACIAL RECKONING |
68 Howard Law Journal 427 (Spring, 2025) |
The possessive investment in whiteness can't be rectified by learning how to be more antiracist. It requires a radical divestment in the project of whiteness . It requires abolition . What is required is a remaking of the social order, and nothing short of that is going to make a difference. --Saidiya Hartman I will live hostile to hostility... |
2025 |
| Gabriel Eckstein |
WHO OWNS HEAT? PROPERTY RIGHTS IN GEOTHERMAL ENERGY |
2025 University of Illinois Law Review 491 (2025) |
Landowners can have ownership claims to oil, gas, water, and other tangible natural resources located in their subsoil. But can they also claim rights to the thermal energy found below their land? With 50,000 times more heat energy within the top 10,000 meters (around 33,000 feet) of the Earth's surface than contained in all of the world's oil and... |
2025 |
| Amy Bitterman |
WHOSE ART IS IT ANYWAY? GUIDELINES FOR RETURNING CULTURAL PROPERTY REMOVED PRIOR TO WORLD WAR II |
73 Buffalo Law Review 819 (August, 2025) |
C1-2Contents Introduction. 820 I. Relevant Law. 822 A. International Law. 823 B. National Laws. 828 1. United States. 828 i. Replevin Law. 828 ii. Law Concerning Museum Deaccessions. 830 2. England. 830 i. Replevin Law. 830 ii. Law Concerning Museum Deaccessions. 831 3. France. 832 i. Replevin Law. 832 ii. Law Concerning Museum Deaccessions. 833... |
2025 |
| Anoo Dinesh Vyas |
WHY CAPPING THE HOUSE AT 435 IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL |
129 Penn State Law Review 361 (Spring, 2025) |
Expanding the House of Representatives could offer several benefits, as noted by various public policy experts. It could make gerrymandering more difficult and mitigate the impact of money in our political system. Additionally, it could lessen political polarization, which some scholars argue has reached levels that threaten the long-term viability... |
2025 |
| Daniel Mendoza, Gary Pulsinelli |
WIPO TREATY ON INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, GENETIC RESOURCES, AND TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE |
17 Landslide 34 (June/July, 2025) |
The commercialization of Indigenous art, crafts, and knowledge has surged alongside rapid technological advancements, amplifying the need for stronger protections and fair compensation for Indigenous peoples and local communities. As these cultural assets become increasingly integrated into global markets, the demand for legal frameworks to... |
2025 |
| Rangita de Silva de Alwis, Penn Law School |
WOMEN'S PROPERTY RIGHTS UNDER CEDAW. BY JOSÉ E. ALVAREZ AND JUDITH BAUDER. OXFORD, UK: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2024. PP. XXI, 432. INDEX |
119 American Journal of International Law 205 (January, 2025) |
Property is a source not only of economic power but also of social, political, and cultural power. The right to property, therefore, lies at the heart of gender inequality, and in turn, women's equal rights to property provoke some of the most heated battles on property ownership. As human rights lawyer Jacqueline Asiimwe writes, Owning land... |
2025 |
| Katharine Silbaugh |
WORK AND HOME |
105 Boston University Law Review 975 (April, 2025) |
C1-2Contents Introduction. 976 I. What Is Work?. 980 II. What Is Home?. 983 Conclusion. 986 |
2025 |