Results 271 to 280 of about 3,617,869 (350)

Land Use Law: Final Examination (August 16, 1966)

open access: yes, 1966
William & Mary Law School
core  

Land Use Law in Planning

Journal of Planning Education and Research, 2006
The environment in which land use is regulated is changing, and thus the skills that planning graduates need are likely to be changing as well. In this article, the authors present the results of a survey of 386 local planning agencies regarding the knowledge and skills pertaining to land use law they expect in entry-level land use planners.
Jerry Anthony, David J. Forkenbrock
openaire   +2 more sources

Geographies of land use: Planning, property, and law

Geography Compass, 2019
Abstract In this article, we draw attention to the geographies of “land use,” which to date have been underexamined and undertheorized within urban geographical literature. To do so, we review insights from a growing set of literature in geography, urban planning, law, and socio‐legal studies, among others, to ...
Trevor J. Wideman, Nick Lombardo
openaire   +2 more sources

Comparative Land Use Law: Patterns of Sustainability

open access: yesPace Environmental Law Review, 2006
Land use scholars and practitioners in the United States trace the development of domestic land use law to 1916, when the City of New York adopted the nation's first comprehensive zoning law, and then on to 1926 when the U.S. Supreme Court declared zoning constitutional in Euclid v. Ambler Realty.
J. Nolon
openaire   +3 more sources

Laws, People and Land Use: A Sociological Perspective on the Relation Between Laws and Land Use

European Planning Studies, 2009
Public policy is often implemented through formal laws. In contrast to the typically optimistic ex-ante analyses of the impact of a set of laws, in retrospect it may be hard to determine what the laws concretely produced. Particularly complicated to measure are the unintended and indirect effects on actors or values that were not the prime focus of the
van Dijk, T., Beunen, R.
openaire   +3 more sources

Building Coalitions Out of Thin Air: Transferable Development Rights and ‘Constituency Effects’ in Land Use Law

Social Science Research Network, 2019
Transferable Development Rights (TDRs) were supposed to be a solution to the intractable problems of land use, a bit of institutional design magic that married the interests of development and preservation at no cost to taxpayers and with no legal risk ...
Roderick M. Hills, Jr., David Schleicher
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Law, History and Land Use

Nature, 1963
The Common Lands of England and Wales By Dr. W. G. Hoskins and Prof. L. Dudley Stamp. (The New Naturalist: a Survey of British Natural History.) Pp. xvii + 366 + 28 plates. (London: William Collins, Sons and Co., Ltd., 1963.) 42s. net.
openaire   +1 more source

Land Use Law and the Environment

Journal of Law and Society, 1991
The emergence of the environment as a mainstream political issue in Britain during the 1980s cannot be understood without an appreciation of the role of the land-use planning system. This system best seen as the constantly evolving web of law, policy and convention which regulates and orders a range of land uses in the United Kingdom1 has been a ...
openaire   +1 more source

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