
Steve Davis, who organized this symposium, starting us off.
We’re underway today with the academic symposium “Euclid Turns 100: Rethinking an Antiquated Case and Reimagining Euclidean Zoning for the Century Ahead” at the George Mason Law School.

Professor Wolf, reminding us to not forget Nectow.
Cosponsored by the law school’s Journal of Law, Economics, and Policy, Mercatus Center, and our outfit Pacific Legal Foundation, the symposium is designed to focus the discussion of housing, zoning, and property rights (hot topics in the headlines), and ask the question: has Euclidean zoning outlived its usefulness? And if so, what, if anything, should replace it?

Professor Ely, looming large.
The speakers include the luminaries in the field, offering not only their scholarly views but also suggesting practical and real-world approaches.

Never bypass the swag table
Stay tuned. In this 100th anniversary year of Euclid, PLF is producing a series of events such as this, culminating in November 2026 the actual date of the Supreme Court’s decision.
When the articles from the symposium are published, we shall post them here.
