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The Constitution and Private Government: Toward the Recognition of Constitutional Rights in Private Residential Communities Fifty Years After Marsh v. Alabama

机译:宪法与私人政府:在Marsh诉阿拉巴马州立法院五十周年后,承认私人住宅社区中的宪法权利

摘要

This Article considers the application of the Supreme Courtu27s state-action theory to residential commmunity associations (RCAs), a form of housing and community governance that has experienced extraordinary growth in recent years. Fewer than 500 RCAs were in existence in the United States before 1960. In the early 1990s, it was estimated that 32 million Americans lived in 150,000 RCAs. A continuing boom in RCA construction has led to predictions that twenty-five to thirty percent of Americans will be living in RCAs by early in the next century. Steven Siegel argues that this trend, although largely unnoticed, carries significant implications for the structure of our government, the delivery of traditional public services, and the availability of constitutional protections.Many RCAs exercise powers traditionally associated with local government. Such powers may be extensive, including the ownership of streets and parks; the regulation of land use and home occupancy; the delivery of services such as refuse collection, street maintenance, and security; and the assessment and collection of mandatory fees that may be considered the functional equivalent of real estate taxes. Although the traditional view of RCAs is that each homeowner consents to the regime or chooses to reside elsewhere, Siegel rejects this view and suggests instead that RCAs are the product of forces other than consumer choice, including local government landuse policies and fiscal pressure on local governments leading to the privatization of local government services. Because of the traditional view, RCAs rarely have been deemed state actors subject to the requirements of the Constitution. As private entities, RCAs regulate behavior in a way that is anathema to traditional constitutional strictures.As with company towns earlier this century, RCAs pose a threat to the constitutional rights of millions of Americans. This threat warrants a principled judicial response. Siegel assesses four established theories of state action and argues that although many RCAs could be considered state actors by operation of one or more of these theories, a more comprehensive and systematic approach to state action should be developed to evaluate RCAs. Siegel provides an approach that accounts for the special characteristics of the RCA form and the legal and political environment in which the RCA operates.
机译:本文考虑了最高法院的国家行为理论在住宅社区协会(RCA)中的应用,RCA是近年来发展迅猛的住房和社区治理形式。 1960年之前,美国的RCA不到500个。在1990年代初期,估计有3500万美国人居住在15万个RCA中。 RCA建设的持续繁荣导致人们预测,到下个世纪初,将有25%到30%的美国人生活在RCA中。史蒂文·西格尔(Steven Siegel)认为,这种趋势尽管未引起人们的注意,但对我们的政府结构,传统公共服务的提供以及宪法保护的可用性产生了重大影响。许多RCA行使传统上与地方政府相关的权力。这种权力可能很广泛,包括拥有街道和公园;土地使用和居住的规定;提供诸如垃圾收集,街道维护和安全之类的服务;以及评估和收取的强制性收费,可能被视为等同于房地产税的功能。尽管RCA的传统观点是每个房主都同意该政权或选择居住在其他地方,但Siegel拒绝了这一观点,而是建议RCA并非消费者选择的力量的产物,包括地方政府的土地使用政策和对地方政府的财政压力导致地方政府服务私有化。由于传统观点,RCA很少被视为受制于宪法要求的国家行为者。作为私人实体,RCA规范行为,这是对传统宪法规定的厌恶。与本世纪初的公司镇一样,RCA威胁着数百万美国人的宪法权利。这种威胁值得进行有原则的司法回应。西格尔(Siegel)评估了四种已确立的国家行为理论,并认为,尽管可以通过运用这些理论中的一个或多个来将许多RCA视为国家行为者,但应该开发一种更为全面和系统的方法来评估RCA。 Siegel提供了一种方法,该方法考虑了RCA表格的特殊特征以及RCA运作所在的法律和政治环境。

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    Siegel Steven;

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  • 年度 1998
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