scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

Suburbs under Siege: Race, Space, and Audacious Judges

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In "Suburbs under Siege" as mentioned in this paper, Charles Haar argues passionately that all people - rich or poor, black or white - have a constitutional right to live in the suburbs and a socially responsible judiciary should vigorously uphold that right.
Abstract
In "Suburbs under Siege" Charles Haar argues passionately that all people - rich or poor, black or white - have a constitutional right to live in the suburbs and that a socially responsible judiciary should vigorously uphold that right. For various reasons, American courts have generally failed to question local zoning regulations that trap the urban poor in the squalor of inner cities, away from decent housing and jobs in the suburbs. No U.S. Supreme Court case, for instance, has confronted exclusionary zoning rules, as Brown v. Board of Education once attacked school segregation. Instead, judges at all levels have most often reinforced the residential segregation that may well destroy American society. In this provocative book on the landmark Mount Laurel cases, Haar shows how the N.J. state judiciary broke out of this pattern of judicial behaviour. These courageous, innovative judges attracted nationwide attention by challenging the forces of affluence that ruled the suburbs (and the legislature) of their state. Furthermore, they based their reasoning on the N.J. state constitution in order to protect their rulings from in-validation by the U.S. Supreme Court. In the early 1970s, when the cases began, the plaintiffs, Ethel Lawrence and her daughter Thomasene, were barely making ends meet in the Philadelphia suburb of Mount Laurel, a town where their African-American ancestors had lived for seven generations. The Lawrences' dream was to live in a Mount Laurel garden apartment planned by a grassroots reform group as affordable housing: in their way stood a typical minimum acreage zoning ordinance. The eventual court victory of the Lawrences and their young public interest attorneys inspired other N.J. suits and a process of remediation that continues to this day, as judges, experts (special masters), the state legislature, and other citizens work to carry out the Mount Laurel principles. Haar's book is a bold attack on conventional doctrines of the separation of powers limitations on the judicial branch and a plea that judges across the country assume their proper responsibilities for fair housing before it is too late.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A Space for Place in Sociology

TL;DR: Sociological studies sensitive to the issue of place are rarely labeled thus, and at the same time there are far too many of them to fit in this review as discussed by the authors, and it may be a good thing that this research is seldom gathered up as a socology of place, for that could ghettoize the subject as something of interest only to geographers, architects, or environmental historians.
Journal ArticleDOI

Urban sprawl and public health

TL;DR: The relationship between sprawl and health is discussed based on eight considerations: air pollution, heat, physical activity patterns, motor vehicle crashes, pedestrian injuries and deaths, water quality and quantity, mental health, and social capital.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brown kids in white suburbs: Housing mobility and the many faces of social capital

TL;DR: In this article, the early impacts of a housing mobility program on social capital were examined in a sample of 132 low-income African-American and Latino adolescents in Yonkers, New York.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Economic History of Zoning and a Cure for its Exclusionary Effects

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors outline the history of American zoning to explain how homeowners came to dominate its content and administration in most jurisdictions, and investigate the possibility of home-equity insurance to reduce the demand for exclusionary zoning.

The link between growth management and housing affordability: the academic evidence

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined a comprehensive selection of literature on the role of growth management and affordable housing and concluded that market demand, not land constraints, is the primary determinant of housing prices; traditional land use regulations and growth management policies can increase the cost of housing, and if housing prices increase in any land use environment, then the decision to improve housing choice rests with the good and bad land use regulation.