U.S. Legal System Listings
The listings assembled within this reference cover the major legal frameworks, regulatory structures, and statutory authorities governing publicly assisted and federally regulated housing in the United States. Each entry maps to a discrete area of law — ranging from tenant due process rights to procurement obligations — and is organized to support lookup by topic, jurisdiction type, or regulatory source. The purpose and scope of this directory explains the selection criteria applied across all listing families. Understanding what is and is not included, and what verification standards apply, is essential before drawing operational or legal conclusions from any entry here.
What listings include and exclude
Listings in this directory reference publicly documented legal frameworks, statutes, regulations, and agency guidance. Every entry connects to a named source: a federal statute, a published regulation in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) notice or handbook, or a federal court ruling available through public dockets.
What listings include:
- Federal statutory frameworks — including the Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. § 1437 et seq.), the Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. §§ 3601–3619), and the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) housing provisions codified at 42 U.S.C. § 14043e-11.
- HUD regulations published in Titles 24 and 42 of the CFR, covering topics from Section 8 voucher legal rights to housing authority administrative hearings.
- Civil rights obligations imposed on public housing authorities (PHAs) under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
- State-level statutory references where a federal floor standard intersects with demonstrably broader state protections — such as source of income discrimination law in jurisdictions that extend beyond federal Fair Housing Act coverage.
- Procedural frameworks, including FOIA access rules under 5 U.S.C. § 552 as applied to housing authority records.
What listings exclude:
- Private contract disputes between non-government parties that do not invoke a federal statutory right
- State-only landlord-tenant law not connected to a federal housing program
- Local ordinances without a direct federal nexus
- Attorney profiles, law firm directories, or practitioner referral entries
- Any content that functions as legal advice, client intake, or service recommendation
The exclusion of state-only and local-only content reflects the domain's national regulatory scope, not a judgment about the importance of those frameworks. The topic context overview provides additional background on why the federal nexus criterion was adopted as the primary boundary.
Verification status
Listings are classified into one of three verification tiers based on the traceability of their primary source:
Tier A — Statute-verified: The listed framework traces directly to a numbered section of the U.S. Code or a final rule published in the Federal Register with an effective date. Examples include eviction law in public housing (grounded in 42 U.S.C. § 1437d(l)) and reasonable accommodation in housing disability law (grounded in 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)).
Tier B — Regulatory-verified: The framework traces to a CFR provision or a HUD handbook that has been formally published but is subject to periodic administrative revision. The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit legal framework and community development block grant legal framework fall in this category because their operational rules derive substantially from IRS Revenue Procedures and HUD program notices that update on irregular cycles.
Tier C — Guidance-level: The framework traces to HUD program guidance, a Federal Register preamble, or agency policy statements that carry interpretive weight but are not legally binding as regulations. These entries are explicitly flagged within their individual pages.
Verification status does not imply legal authority or enforceability in any specific proceeding. The status is a reference classification only.
Coverage gaps
No directory of this type achieves complete coverage. Documented gaps in the current listing set include:
- Tribal housing authority law: Legal frameworks governing tribally designated housing entities (TDHEs) under the Native American Housing Assistance and Self-Determination Act of 1996 (NAHASDA, 25 U.S.C. § 4101 et seq.) are not represented in the current listing set.
- Puerto Rico and territorial housing programs: HUD-assisted housing in U.S. territories operates under modified regulatory structures that differ from the 50-state framework in material ways.
- Fair housing testing enforcement methods: The fair housing testing enforcement topic is identified as a planned entry pending source verification of HUD FHEO procedural materials.
- Mixed-finance development law: Transactions combining Low-Income Housing Tax Credits with HUD project-based assistance involve cross-agency compliance structures that are only partially addressed in mixed-income housing legal considerations.
Identified gaps are tracked against HUD's published regulatory agenda (available at reginfo.gov) and updated when corresponding source documents achieve final rule or formal guidance status.
Listing categories
The directory organizes entries across 6 functional categories, each corresponding to a distinct area of federally regulated housing law:
- Tenant rights and due process — Covers tenant due process rights in public housing, housing authority grievance procedures, and related administrative hearing frameworks.
- Civil rights and anti-discrimination — Covers the Fair Housing Act legal framework, housing discrimination legal remedies, housing authority civil rights obligations, and domestic violence housing protections under VAWA.
- Program-specific legal rules — Covers public housing authority structure, housing voucher portability legal rules, income verification requirements, and criminal background screening in housing law.
- Governance and compliance — Covers housing authority governance and board legal duties, federally assisted housing compliance, housing authority procurement law, and HUD enforcement actions and legal process.
- Finance and development law — Covers affordable housing zoning law, housing authority funding legal requirements, and relocation assistance under federal housing law.
- Environmental and physical standards — Covers lead paint disclosure in housing law, housing authority environmental compliance, and manufactured housing federal legal standards.
Each category page identifies the primary statutory authority, the relevant CFR title and part, and the HUD office or program office with administrative jurisdiction over that framework. Entries within the same category share regulatory lineage but are maintained as discrete pages because enforcement mechanisms, standing requirements, and available remedies differ materially across topics — distinctions that category-level summaries cannot adequately capture.
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References
- 42 U.S.C. § 1983 — Civil Action for Deprivation of Rights (Cornell LII)
- 42 U.S.C. § 1988 — Proceedings in Vindication of Civil Rights (Cornell LII)
- 42 U.S.C. § 3604
- Equal Credit Opportunity Act (15 U.S.C. § 1691)
- Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. §§ 3601–3619)
- Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 794 (Cornell LII)
- 12 C.F.R. Part 1003
- 12 C.F.R. Part 1003