Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 8 of 8

Full-Text Articles in Law

Professor Bruce Huber, Diploma Ceremony Address, Bruce R. Huber Aug 2017

Professor Bruce Huber, Diploma Ceremony Address, Bruce R. Huber

Bruce R Huber

Law Professor, Bruce Huber, Robert and Marion Short Scholar, and the Law School Distinguished Teacher, delivered the diploma ceremony address to the Class of 2017 on May 20, 2017.


Bruce Huber Was A Guest On Npr's All Things Considered, "What The Keystone Xl Pipeline Decision Actually Means", Bruce R. Huber Jun 2016

Bruce Huber Was A Guest On Npr's All Things Considered, "What The Keystone Xl Pipeline Decision Actually Means", Bruce R. Huber

Bruce R Huber

President Obama has rejected the application to complete the Keystone XL pipeline. Bruce Huber, professor of energy law at the University of Notre Dame, talks about the Keystone pipeline decision.


Bruce Huber Was A Guest On Npr's The Weekend Show, "Environmentalists Celebrate Keystone Xl Decision", Bruce R. Huber Jun 2016

Bruce Huber Was A Guest On Npr's The Weekend Show, "Environmentalists Celebrate Keystone Xl Decision", Bruce R. Huber

Bruce R Huber

Environmental groups and activists are celebrating President Obama's decision to reject the Keystone XL Pipeline plan, but some people say that the Keystone decision is a symbolic one.


The Fair Market Value Of Public Resources, Bruce R. Huber Jun 2016

The Fair Market Value Of Public Resources, Bruce R. Huber

Bruce R Huber

This Article explores the problem of public resource sales with particular reference to natural resources managed by the federal government. Lands owned by the United States hold trillions of dollars' worth of natural resources. Federal agencies earn billions in annual revenue from resource sales, yet critics assert that billions more could be reaped if resources were sold for a fair price. Although federal law has increasingly required that agencies price resources at fair market value, this requirement is surprisingly difficult to interpret and even more dfficult to implement and enforce. This Article analyzes the various forces that bear on public …


Demand Response And Market Power, Bruce R. Huber Jun 2016

Demand Response And Market Power, Bruce R. Huber

Bruce R Huber

In her article, Bypassing Federalism and the Administrative Law of Negawatts, Sharon Jacobs educates her readers about the concept of demand response, and then describes its propagation in recent years while making the broader argument that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”) — the federal government’s principal energy regulator — has engaged in a strategy of “bypassing federalism” that may entail more costs than benefits. Professor Jacobs is right to call attention to demand response and to FERC’s approach to matters of jurisdictional doubt. While I share many of her concerns about boundary lines in a federal system, I argue …


The Durability Of Private Claims To Public Property, Bruce R. Huber Jun 2014

The Durability Of Private Claims To Public Property, Bruce R. Huber

Bruce R Huber

Property rights and resource use are closely related. Scholarly inquiry about their relation, however, tends to emphasize private property arrangements while ignoring public property — property formally owned by government. The well-known tragedies of the commons and anticommons, for example, are generally analyzed with reference to the optimal form and degree of private ownership. But what about property owned by the state? The federal government alone owns nearly one-third of the land area of the United States. One could well ask: is there a tragedy associated with public property, too? If there is, here is what it might look like: …


How Did Rggi Do It? Political Economy And Emissions Auctions, Bruce R. Huber Nov 2013

How Did Rggi Do It? Political Economy And Emissions Auctions, Bruce R. Huber

Bruce R Huber

Among the major emissions trading schemes in operation around the world, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) stands alone: this CO2 cap-and-trade program among nine northeastern states is the only such scheme to rely primarily on auctions to distribute emissions allowances. The standard practice - distributing allowances for free on the basis of historical emissions - elicits begrudging but politically crucial support from some regulated emitters. Like carbon taxation, allowance auctioning has long been considered economically superior to its alternatives but politically infeasible.

How did the RGGI states manage to defy conventional wisdom and institute a program so reliant …


Transition Policy In Environmental Law, Bruce R. Huber Nov 2013

Transition Policy In Environmental Law, Bruce R. Huber

Bruce R Huber

Embedded within the structure of much American environmental regulation is a distinction between the new and the existing. This distinction reflects a recurrent political challenge for environmental policymakers: whether and how to mitigate regulatory burdens when policy change upsets settled expectations and investment commitments. Environmental law often grandfathers existing products and pollution sources or provides them with other kinds of transition relief. This paper presents a survey of transition policies in environmental regulation, which is followed by a pair of short case studies drawn from the trucking and pesticide industries. These examples demonstrate that the form and extent of transition …