Reflections on the 37th John E. Sullivan Lecture at Capital University Law School by Professor Dorothy Roberts: The Persistence of Racial Segregation in Housing
In: Forthcoming Vol 45 No 1 Capital U L Rev late
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In: Forthcoming Vol 45 No 1 Capital U L Rev late
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In: Local Government, Land Use, and the First Amendment, American Bar Association, 2017 Forthcoming
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In: Cleveland-Marshall Legal Studies Paper No. 16-296
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In: Fordham Urban Law Journal, Band 39
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In: Cleveland State Law Review, Band 60, S. 655
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In: Albany Government Law Review, Forthcoming
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In: The urban lawyer: the national journal on state and local government law, Band 31, Heft 4, S. 931-936
ISSN: 0042-0905
In: 47 Urban Law l569 (2015)
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In: Cleveland-Marshall Legal Studies Paper No. 11-233
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In: Law & policy, Band 31, Heft 2, S. 217-235
ISSN: 1467-9930
Recent federal court decisions appear to limit the ability of cities to mitigate the ambient crime risks associated with adult entertainment businesses. In one instance, a court has assumed that criminological theories do not apply to "off‐site" adult businesses. After developing the legal doctrine of secondary effects, we demonstrate that the prevailing criminological theory applies to all adult business models. To corroborate the theory, we report the results of a before/after quasi‐experiment for an off‐site adult business. When an off‐site adult business opens, ambient crime risk doubles compared to a control area. As theory predicts, moreover, ambient victimization risk is most acute in night‐time hours. The theoretical development and empirical results have obvious implications for the evolving legal doctrine of secondary effects.
In: Managing Local Government: Public Administration in Practice, S. 61-74