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Jessica Asbridge

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Come and Take It: The Eminent Domain PodcastCome and Take It: The Eminent Domain Podcast132: Scholarship Round Up with Profs. Jessica Asbridge and Emilio LongoriaProfessors Jessica Asbridge and Emilio Longoria join host Bobby Debelak to discuss their favorite property law and eminent domain papers of the last year.  The scholarship covers the argument for at-will employment as a taking, originalist interpretations of the constitution, deed restrictions, the contract clause, and more.   Paper Links: Michael L. Smith, Is Originalism Bulls**t? https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4749322 Maureen E. Brady, Covenants and the Contract Clause, Va. Envt'l L.J. (forthcoming 2025), https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4856354 Racabi, At Wil...2024-10-141h 06Come and Take It: The Eminent Domain PodcastCome and Take It: The Eminent Domain PodcastProfessor Jessica Asbridge on Private Delegations of the Eminent Domain PowerProfessor Jessica Asbridge of Baylor Law joins the podcast to discuss her upcoming law review article addressing the private delegation of the eminent domain power.  We have an insightful conversation that concerns the law and policy around private companies, such as pipelines, that exercise the eminent domain power, why that exercise is often subject to scant regulation, and the effect of that lack of oversight.  Professor Asbridge also suggests language from, of all places, the Kelo decision that might be helpful in considering a private entity’s right to take property.   Professor Asbridge's article  2023-01-1631 minEminent Domain PodcastEminent Domain PodcastProfessor Jessica Asbridge on Private Delegations of the Eminent Domain Power Facebook Twitter Gmail LinkedIn Professor Jessica Asbridge of Baylor Law joins the podcast to discuss her new law review article addressing the private delegation of the eminent domain power.  We have an insightful conversation that concerns the law and policy around private companies, such as pipelines, that exercise the eminent domain power, why that exercise is often subject to scant regulation, and the effect of that lack of oversight.  Professor Asbridge also suggests language from, of all places, the Kelo decision that migh2023-01-1631 min