Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2005
Publication Title
Municipal Lawyer
Keywords
adult entertainment businesses, methodological challenge, Alameda Books, on-site vs off-site challenge, evidence
Abstract
Recently, adult business attorneys, assisted by academic experts, have begun raising new challenges that target the claim that local governments regulate adult businesses to control their secondary effects. This article discusses the nature of these challenges, analyzes how they've fared in the courts, and suggests how local governments should respond when faced with these new claims.
Repository Citation
Alan C. Weinstein, Responding to the Adult Industry's Claims About "No Secondary Effects," 46 Municipal Lawyer 6 (September-October 2005)
Publisher's Statement
This article was first published by the International Municipal Lawyers Association (IMLA), 7910 Woodmont Ave., Bethesda, MD. 20814, and is reproduced with the permission of IMLA. IMLA is a non-profit, professional organization that has been an advocate and resource for local government attorneys since 1935. IMLA serves more than 3,400 member municipalities and local government entities in the United States and Canada, and is the only international organization devoted exclusively to addressing the needs of local government lawyers. Further information about IMLA is available at IMLA's website, www.imla.org
Volume
46