1 minute read
Sarah L. Swan
Assistant Professor
J.S.D., COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, 2016
Advertisement
LL.M., COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, 2010
J.D., UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA, 2004
B.A., UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA, 2001 Constitutional Off-loading at the City Limits, 135 Harv. L. Rev. _ (forthcoming 2022)
Tort Law and Feminism, in The Oxford Handbook on Feminism and Law in the United States (Deborah L. Brakes et al., editors) (forthcoming 2021)
Farwell v. Keaton: Rewritten Opinion, in Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Torts Opinions (Lucinda Finley & Martha Chamallas, editors) (Cambridge University Press 2020)
Running Interference: The Role of Third Parties in Preemption, Petition, and the Powers of Local Government, 36 J. Land Use & Envtl. L. _ (forthcoming 2021)
Exclusion Diffusion, 70 Emory L.J. 847 (2021)
Procedural Discriminatory Dualism: Campus Sexual Assault and Title IX, 73 Okla. L. Rev. 69 (2020)
Discriminatory Dualism, 54 Ga. L. Rev. 869 (2020)
In Constitutional Off-loading at the City Limits, 135 Harvard Law review _ (forthcoming 2022), Professor Sarah Swan explores whether municipalities may exclude constitutionally-protected land uses by pointing to availability in a neighboring town. She shows that courts have adopted a tailored approach, allowing small localities, but not large cities, to engage in constitutional off-loading, and discusses the ensuing implications for localism, urban and rural polarization, and city-state power relations.