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Local Government Law : Cases and Materials (Seventh edition)

Part of the American casebook series series
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Law students are increasingly drawn to local government law as an alternative to federal partisan gridlock.

This law school casebook is built around three central thematic issues in the field: (1) How much power should cities have, relative to states or the federal government (the decentralization question)? (2) How can cities coordinate with each other across a city-suburb divide, in the context of regional inequality, racial segregation, and sprawl? (3) How should city governments be structured and managed internally, in terms of raising revenue, delivering services (including police), attracting jobs, and voting? The casebook answers these questions using case law as well as excerpts from the urban studies literature (including history, political science, sociology, and planning).

The new edition retains the original vision and structure of this casebook, while also offering a comprehensive doctrinal update of fast-moving questions like the state/local preemption wars, as well as new material related to gentrification, racial segregation, the abuse of power through local fines and fees, and conflicts over policing.

It is well suited to mixed classrooms with law and non-law students.

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£264.60 Save 10.00%
RRP £294.00
Product Details
West Academic Press
1684673380 / 9781684673384
Hardback
30/10/2022
United States
English
1036 pages
26 cm
Previous edition: published as by Gerald E. Frug, Richard T. Ford, David J. Barron. 2015.