Not for Sale
eBook - ePub

Not for Sale

Kelo v. New London and the Modern Debate over Eminent Domain

  1. 172 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Not for Sale

Kelo v. New London and the Modern Debate over Eminent Domain

About this book

The dramatic story of how a small neighborhood in Connecticut became the site and symbol of a political conflict over the use of eminent domain, mobilizing a national property rights movement.

In 2000, Susette Kelo and other residents of the Fort Trumbull neighborhood sued the city of New London, Connecticut. Two years earlier, the pharmaceutical giant Pfizer had built a facility adjacent to this area. Shortly thereafter, the city empowered the privately owned New London Development Corporation to use the power of eminent domain to implement a “comprehensive redevelopment plan” for the neighborhood. While the plaintiffs argued that economic development did not qualify as a valid “public use” under the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment, the Supreme Court decided in a controversial 2005 decision that the potential economic benefits of the plan justified the condemnation of private property as long as appropriate compensation was paid.

The Kelo decision implied that any town could transfer property to private developers on the grounds of possible future tax revenue and job creation, so long as that action was included in an economic development plan. The outrage over the decision unleashed a near-unanimous backlash, even resulting in an executive order from President George W. Bush instructing the federal government to limit the use of eminent domain. Numerous states passed ballot initiatives and legislation restricting eminent domain in the wake of the Kelo case. Despite this outcry, urban planners and others defended it as a necessary application of existing precedent that allowed cities flexibility to combat economic downturns. Lead plaintiff Susette Kelo and her pink house became a symbol of a growing national property rights movement and a deepening conflict between public officials and property owners, between large corporations and local communities. Perhaps most disastrously, after bulldozing the neighborhood the developer was unable to secure the necessary financing and abandoned the project, leaving empty lots where the plaintiffs’ properties once stood. It would be many years before a feasible plan led to actual new construction and improvements.

Not for Sale recounts this iconic episode in recent legal history, giving full attention to both the human and legal elements of the story and offering a balanced consideration of each. The story remains as relevant as ever, especially since the Supreme Court has repeatedly refused to reconsider its decision, most recently in Bowers Development, LLC v. Oneida County Industrial Development Agency (2025).

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Information

Year
2026
Print ISBN
9780700641543
9780700641536
eBook ISBN
9780700641550
Topic
Law
Index
Law

Table of contents

  1. Front Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Series Page
  4. Title Page
  5. Copyright Page
  6. Table of Contents
  7. Series Foreword
  8. Introduction
  9. 1. Sea and Land: New London’s History of Perseverance, Missteps, and Success
  10. 2. New London’s Ship Comes In: The Redevelopment Plan Advances, 1997–2000
  11. 3. Property Rights and Public Use: Placing Kelo in Historic Legal Context
  12. 4. The Long Journey through the State Courts
  13. 5. New London Meets the Constitution in the United States Supreme Court
  14. 6. After Kelo, Across the Nation and Back to New London
  15. 7. Learning from Kelo
  16. Acknowledgments
  17. Chronology
  18. List of Cases Cited
  19. Bibliographic Essay
  20. Index
  21. Back Cover

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Yes, you can access Not for Sale by Francine Sanders Romero in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Law & Environmental Law. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.