Browsing Law School by Title
Now showing items 1-7 of 7
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Britain’s Right to Roam: Redefining the Landowner's Bundle of Sticks
(Foreign Relations, 2007)Britain recently enacted a “right to roam” in the Countryside and Rights of Way Act (CRoW) 2000. At first glance, CRoW appears to be a dramatic curtailment of the landowner’s traditional right to exclude; it opens up all ... -
Does the Past Predict the Future?: An Empirical Analysis of Recent Iowa Supreme Court Use of Legislative History as a Window into Statutory Construction in Iowa
(Drake University Law School, 2015)This Article provides an empirical analysis of Iowa Supreme Court decisions from 2004–2013 that employ legislative history in interpreting Iowa statutes. It answers the question: When the Iowa Supreme Court consults ... -
Is the Wheel Unbalanced? A Study of Bias on Zoning Boards
(American Bar Association, 2004)This article describes an empirical study of the occupational composition of zoning boards in Iowa. The study finds that both zoning adjustment boards and planning commissions are heavily weighted toward white-collar ... -
Law School Enters the Matrix: Teaching Critical Legal Studies
(American Association of Law Schools, 2004-06)Critical legal theory should be more widely taught as a useful way of analyzing the law. Recent critiques of CLS do not diminish its usefulness as a tool for teaching critical thinking. Many professors, however, find it ... -
Protection for the Powerless: Political Economy History Lessons for the Animal Welfare Movement
(Stanford Journal of Animal Law and Policy, 2011-01)In the last several decades, animal agriculture has experienced a dramatic shift in production methods, from family farms to concentrated industrial operations, with societal consequences comparable to the Industrial ... -
A Study of American Zoning Board Composition and Public Attitudes Toward Zoning Issues
(American Bar Association, 2008)The authors surveyed zoning boards in the over 100 of the largest U.S. cities to determine the occupational composition of board members. It comes as no surprise that the boards are overwhelming populated with white-collar ... -
Zoning Bias II: A Study of Oregon's Zoning Commission Composition Restrictions
(American Bar Association, 2006)This article summarizes an empirical survey of Oregon planning commissions, to determine whether Oregon's occupational restrictions on commission appointments are working. An earlier survey found that zoning boards in ...