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Articles 1 - 30 of 32
Full-Text Articles in Law
No Alternative: The Failure Of The Minnesota Environmental Policy Act To Consider Project Alternatives And Proposed Remedies, Kevin Swanberg
No Alternative: The Failure Of The Minnesota Environmental Policy Act To Consider Project Alternatives And Proposed Remedies, Kevin Swanberg
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Restorative Justice And The Rights Of Nature: Using Indigenous Legal Traditions To Influence Cultural Change And Promote Environmental Protection, Anne Haluska
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Energy Grid Decarbonization: A Tale Of Resistance And Compliance In Florida, Rachel Tennant
Energy Grid Decarbonization: A Tale Of Resistance And Compliance In Florida, Rachel Tennant
Mitchell Hamline Law Journal of Public Policy and Practice
No abstract provided.
Minnesota's Children: The True Cost Of Minnesota's Lead Problem, Kaitlin Yira
Minnesota's Children: The True Cost Of Minnesota's Lead Problem, Kaitlin Yira
Mitchell Hamline Law Journal of Public Policy and Practice
No abstract provided.
How The Safe Drinking Water Act & The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, And Liability Act Fail Emerging Contaminants: A Per- And Polyfluoralkyl Substances (Pfas) Case Study, Carly Johnson
Mitchell Hamline Law Journal of Public Policy and Practice
No abstract provided.
The Toxic Crusaders: Exploring The History Of The Criminal Enforcement Of The Toxic Substances Control Act, Joshua Ozymy, Melissa L. Jarrell
The Toxic Crusaders: Exploring The History Of The Criminal Enforcement Of The Toxic Substances Control Act, Joshua Ozymy, Melissa L. Jarrell
Mitchell Hamline Law Journal of Public Policy and Practice
The criminal prosecution of defendants who violated federal laws governing chemical substances has been ongoing for roughly four decades. Yet we continue to have a poor understanding of how federal prosecutors use the U.S. Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) to charge and prosecute environmental criminals. Through content analysis of all the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) criminal prosecution case summaries from 1983 to 2019, we analyze all TSCA-focused prosecutions for two purposes. First, to gain a better historical understanding of how federal prosecutors have used TSCA as a prosecutorial tool. Second, to understand outcomes of those prosecutions. Results show that 38% …
The Simultaneous Pursuit Of Cost Recovery And Contribution Under Cercla: Making Sense Of Cercla's Private Party Remedies In The Aftermath Of Atlantic Research, Eric A. Degroff
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Taking A “Hard Look”: The Legality And Policy Implications Surrounding The Polymet Mine Land Transfer, Kyle Hoffmeister
Taking A “Hard Look”: The Legality And Policy Implications Surrounding The Polymet Mine Land Transfer, Kyle Hoffmeister
Mitchell Hamline Law Journal of Public Policy and Practice
No abstract provided.
Strictly Leakage: How Minnesota Export Subsidies Pay For Climate Pollution, Hudson B. Kingston
Strictly Leakage: How Minnesota Export Subsidies Pay For Climate Pollution, Hudson B. Kingston
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Wotus: The Water Definition Battle That Defines The Nation, Kole W. Kelley, Cassandra N. Bantz
Wotus: The Water Definition Battle That Defines The Nation, Kole W. Kelley, Cassandra N. Bantz
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Standing Dead: An Analysis Of Nonhuman Personhood In U.S. Jurisprudence, Morgan Voight
The Standing Dead: An Analysis Of Nonhuman Personhood In U.S. Jurisprudence, Morgan Voight
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Root And Branch: The Thirteenth Amendment And Environmental Justice, Mehmet K. Konar-Steenberg
Root And Branch: The Thirteenth Amendment And Environmental Justice, Mehmet K. Konar-Steenberg
Faculty Scholarship
Forty years since the birth of the environmental justice movement, environmental injustice persists. One reason is the failure to identify a viable constitutional root for environmental justice doctrine in either the Fourteenth Amendment or Commerce Clause. Accordingly, this essay argues that the Thirteenth Amendment might provide a fertile environment for a flourishing law of environmental justice.
Part I will describes how environmental justice’s distributive justice vision was at odds with environmental law’s positivist, proceduralist core, and how that difference helps to account for the constitutional difficulties that followed. Part II describe one of those difficulties: the disparate impact problem and …
I Can See Clearly Now: The Epa's Authority To Regulate Indian Country Under The Clean Air Act, Richard Duncan, Christiana Martenson
I Can See Clearly Now: The Epa's Authority To Regulate Indian Country Under The Clean Air Act, Richard Duncan, Christiana Martenson
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.
Redd+: Climate Justice Or A New Face Of Manifest Destiny? Lessons Drawn From The Indigenous Struggle To Resist Colonization Of Ojibwe Forests In The Nineteenth And Twentieth Centuries, Philomena Kebec
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.
Climate Change Adaptation In Indian Country: Tribal Regulation Of Reservation Lands And Natural Resources, Jamie Kay Ford, Erick Giles
Climate Change Adaptation In Indian Country: Tribal Regulation Of Reservation Lands And Natural Resources, Jamie Kay Ford, Erick Giles
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.
Tribal Strategies For Protecting And Preserving Groundwater, Stephen V. Quesenberry, Timothy C. Seward, Adam P. Bailey
Tribal Strategies For Protecting And Preserving Groundwater, Stephen V. Quesenberry, Timothy C. Seward, Adam P. Bailey
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.
"Free The Land": A Call For Local Governments To Address Climate-Induced Food Insecurity In Environmental Justice Communities, Liza Guerra Garcia
"Free The Land": A Call For Local Governments To Address Climate-Induced Food Insecurity In Environmental Justice Communities, Liza Guerra Garcia
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.
Tribal Authority To Protect Water Resources And Reserved Rights Under Clean Water Act Section 401, Paula Goodman Maccabee
Tribal Authority To Protect Water Resources And Reserved Rights Under Clean Water Act Section 401, Paula Goodman Maccabee
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.
Sulfide Mining In Northern Minnesota: A Review Of Possible Legal Recourse For Environmental Harm To Individuals, Jamison L. Tessneer
Sulfide Mining In Northern Minnesota: A Review Of Possible Legal Recourse For Environmental Harm To Individuals, Jamison L. Tessneer
Journal of Law and Practice
No abstract provided.
In Re Annandale And The Disconnections Between Minnesota And Federal Agency Deference Doctrine, Mehmet K. Konar-Steenberg
In Re Annandale And The Disconnections Between Minnesota And Federal Agency Deference Doctrine, Mehmet K. Konar-Steenberg
Faculty Scholarship
This article explores each of these differences between Annandale’s view of deference and comparable federal authority. Part II begins the discussion with an explanation of the somewhat complicated legal and factual background that gave rise to Annandale’s unusually thorny agency deference issues. This section includes an extended discussion of the Annandale administrative record and the reasoning of the Minnesota Court of Appeals and Minnesota Supreme Court. Part III then critically analyzes the Annandale court’s claims to have acted consistently with federal agency deference case law in each of the three areas discussed above. Part IV concludes with some post-Annandale developments …
State V. Colosimo: Minnesota Anglers’ Freedom From Unreasonable Searches And Seizures Becomes “The One That Got Away”, Edwin J. Butterfoss, Joseph L. Daly
State V. Colosimo: Minnesota Anglers’ Freedom From Unreasonable Searches And Seizures Becomes “The One That Got Away”, Edwin J. Butterfoss, Joseph L. Daly
William Mitchell Law Review
This article examines the various opinions in the Colosimo case, including the opinion of the Minnesota Court of Appeals (which was reversed by the supreme court), as well as the majority, concurring, and dissenting opinions of the supreme court. The article provides a brief background of how the issue of stops and inspections by conservation officers has been dealt with in other jurisdictions before turning to a critique of the Minnesota Supreme Court's decision in Colosimo, which the authors consider far too expansive. The decision in Colosimo undermines the right of citizens of Minnesota to be free from invasions of …
The Tale Of A Tail, James F. Hogg
The Tale Of A Tail, James F. Hogg
Faculty Scholarship
The commercial general liability insurance industry shifted, in 1986, from the use of an “occurrence-based” to a “claims-made” policy form. So-called “tail” or “long tail” claims have continued nevertheless, to be asserted under the older “occurrence” policies which required that injury occur during the term of the policy, but not that the claim for such injury be made or brought at any particular time. In seeking state approval to use the new “claims-made” form in 1985-86, the insurance industry represented that the new form would not affect coverage under the old “occurrence” form. Despite that representation, insurers are now asserting, …
The Goals Of Environmental Enforcement And The Range Of Enforcement Methods In Israel And In The United States, Marcia R. Gelpe
The Goals Of Environmental Enforcement And The Range Of Enforcement Methods In Israel And In The United States, Marcia R. Gelpe
Faculty Scholarship
The article examines enforcement of the environmental laws of Israel and of the United States. It concentrates on provisions for enforcement of the laws by government authorities--that is, either by administrative authorities or by the courts at the request of an administrative authority. Environmental laws in many jurisdictions may also be enforced by private actions. These private enforcement actions are not addressed specifically in this article, although much of what is said is also applicable to such actions.
Organizing Themes Of Environmental Law, Marcia R. Gelpe
Organizing Themes Of Environmental Law, Marcia R. Gelpe
Faculty Scholarship
This article is designed to assist students and lawyers in their work in the field of Environmental Law; specifically, in the area of preventing and mitigating the effects of pollution. The article begins with the origins of modern environmental law. It briefly summarizes the reasons we have environmental problems and describes the inadequacies of the common law responses. This is key to understanding modern environmental statutes, which are designed to remedy the shortcomings of the common law. The main part of the article sets out the various approaches to remedying those shortcomings and gives examples of environmental statutes which take …
Penalties In Settlements Of Citizen Suit Enforcement Actions Under The Clean Water Act, Marcia R. Gelpe
Penalties In Settlements Of Citizen Suit Enforcement Actions Under The Clean Water Act, Marcia R. Gelpe
Faculty Scholarship
This article critiques the feminist view Ute Gerhard offers in “Debating Women's Equality: Toward a Feminist Theory of Law from a European Perspective”. Throughout Debating Women's Equality, Gerhard appears to have three ambitious objectives in mind: (1) to decry the paucity of research into women's legal history while beginning to do the needed work, focusing primarily on Germany but also broadly exploring European trends, (2) to demonstrate that German/European women's legal history ultimately vindicates reliance on “equal rights” as a political strategy for women, and (3) to develop an understanding of legal equality that can serve as a meaningful tool …
Environmental Quality: Three Ways To Decide How Much To Spend, Marcia R. Gelpe
Environmental Quality: Three Ways To Decide How Much To Spend, Marcia R. Gelpe
Faculty Scholarship
Federal and state laws limiting environmental emissions reflect three approaches to deciding how much money to spend on improving environmental quality. The balancing approach estimates the benefits of limiting emissions and the costs of meeting various limits, then sets limits at levels where benefits justify costs. The cost ignoring approach sets emissions limits at levels necessary to prevent environmental harm, without considering the costs of meeting those limits. Technology-based standards limit emissions to levels attainable using the best pollution control technology, as long as no significant environmental effects are known to occur at those levels. In this article, the author …
Exhaustion Of Administrative Remedies: The Lesson From Environmental Cases, Marcia R. Gelpe
Exhaustion Of Administrative Remedies: The Lesson From Environmental Cases, Marcia R. Gelpe
Faculty Scholarship
The law governing exhaustion of administrative remedies is complex and confusing and fosters needless litigation: litigation that is burdensome to the courts and costly to defendants, that adversely affects agency decision making and that by its very existence, wrongly influences courts to dispense with the exhaustion requirement. Exhaustion remains troublesome to the courts; many of the decisions are confusing and poorly reasoned. A reexamination of the exhaustion doctrine is called for, not only to indicate how the cases should be decided, but also to clarify the issues sufficiently to guide parties' behavior so that they may avoid litigation over exhaustion's …
Compensation For Victims Of Hazardous Substance Exposure, J. David Prince
Compensation For Victims Of Hazardous Substance Exposure, J. David Prince
Faculty Scholarship
Hazardous wastes, threatening environmental and human safety, are being generated at an alarming rate. In this Article, J. David Prince discusses the threats posed by hazardous wastes and the remedies that are available in Minnesota for dealing with those threats. Professor Prince analyzes a proposed compensation scheme for victims of hazardous waste exposure in Minnesota and suggests that a modification of that scheme be adopted by the Minnesota Legislature.
Animal Feedlot Regulation In Minnesota, Marcia R. Gelpe
Animal Feedlot Regulation In Minnesota, Marcia R. Gelpe
Faculty Scholarship
Animal feedlots frequently are the subject of dispute between operators and surrounding landowners. In this Article, Professor Gelpe identifies the environmental problems created by animal feedlots and discusses the common-law remedies. In addition, Professor Gelpe provides valuable insights into the application and Interpretation of feedlot regulations recently enacted by Minnesota.
Annual Report Of The Electric Power Committee, J. David Prince
Annual Report Of The Electric Power Committee, J. David Prince
Faculty Scholarship
This is the annual report of the Electric Power Committee for 1980. It reports on legislative and judicial developments, and issues relevant to the Electric Power Committee.