Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Justice Black (3)
- Billy Budd (2)
- Fourteenth Amendment (2)
- Housing (2)
- Judges (2)
-
- Rule of law (2)
- The Greening of America (2)
- Yale Law School (2)
- 9/11 (1)
- A Metric for Comparing Climate Change Mitigation Efforts Across Jurisdictions (1)
- A love of beauty and people (1)
- Adverse witnesses (1)
- Aggregate emissions (1)
- Amendments (1)
- American Consciousness (1)
- An Almanac of Liberty (1)
- Antitrust (1)
- Arbitrary infringement (1)
- Balancing test (1)
- Barsky dissent (1)
- Bill of Rights (1)
- Brown v. Board of Education (1)
- Bureaucracy (1)
- Burger court (1)
- Calabresi (1)
- Cap-and-trade system (1)
- Carbon Price Equivalent (1)
- Carbon pricing (1)
- Central government (1)
- Certiorari (1)
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Case Against The Case For Zoning, Michael Lewyn
The Case Against The Case For Zoning, Michael Lewyn
Scholarly Works
Power points used in a presentation on a work in progress, responding to Christopher Serkin's "Case For Zoning" article at 96 Notre Dame L. Rev. 749.
Keeping Up: Walking With Justice Douglas, Charles A. Reich
Keeping Up: Walking With Justice Douglas, Charles A. Reich
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
Charles Reich: Due Process In The Eye Of The Receiver, Harold Hongju Koh
Charles Reich: Due Process In The Eye Of The Receiver, Harold Hongju Koh
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
My Friend, Charles Reich, Hon. Guido Calabresi
The Carbon Price Equivalent: A Metric For Comparing Climate Change Mitigation Efforts Across Jurisdictions, Gabriel Weil
The Carbon Price Equivalent: A Metric For Comparing Climate Change Mitigation Efforts Across Jurisdictions, Gabriel Weil
Scholarly Works
Climate change presents a global commons problem: Emissions reductions on the scale needed to meet global targets do not pass a domestic cost-benefit test in most countries. To give national governments ample incentive to pursue deep decarbonization, mutual interstate coercion will be necessary. Many proposed tools of coercive climate diplomacy would require a one-dimensional metric for comparing the stringency of climate change mitigation policy packages across jurisdictions. This article proposes and defends such a metric: the carbon price equivalent. There is substantial variation in the set of climate change mitigation policy instruments implemented by different countries. Nonetheless, the consequences of …