Document Type

Article

Disciplines

Consumer Protection Law | Housing Law | Property Law and Real Estate

Abstract

All sorts of landlords—governmental landlords, cooperatives, large-scale corporate landlords, and mom-and-pops—engage in slumlording to some degree. Despite that fact, some of the most popular proposed solutions to the problem focus on a property owner’s size and corporate form, rather than its property management practices. This Essay contends that management, not ownership, is the proper target for regulations intended to improve the conditions under which many tenants live. It then proposes pairing and using in tandem two mechanisms for addressing management: licensing and receivership.

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