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- Myanna Dellinger (4)
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Articles 1 - 30 of 46
Full-Text Articles in Law
Localizing Climate Change Action, Marianne Dellinger
Localizing Climate Change Action, Marianne Dellinger
Myanna Dellinger
Localizing Climate Change Action - abstract
Myanna Dellinger
Waiting for national- or supranational-level actors to take substantively effective action against climate change is like waiting for Godot: unlikely to happen, at least at a substantively early enough point in time. The December 2012 negotiations under the UNFCCC umbrella yet again demonstrated the failure of action at the international level. This article adds new value to existing scholarship by conducting original research into select climate initiatives at the subnational, substate level in order to find out whether it is worth pursuing climate change action at this level instead. The article posits …
Localizing Climate Change Action, Marianne Dellinger
Localizing Climate Change Action, Marianne Dellinger
Myanna Dellinger
Localizing Climate Change Action - abstract
Myanna Dellinger
Waiting for national- or supranational-level actors to take substantively effective action against climate change is like waiting for Godot: unlikely to happen, at least at a substantively early enough point in time. The December 2012 negotiations under the UNFCCC umbrella yet again demonstrated the failure of action at the international level. This article adds new value to existing scholarship by conducting original research into select climate initiatives at the subnational, substate level in order to find out whether it is worth pursuing climate change action at this level instead. The article posits …
Localizing Climate Change Action, Marianne Dellinger
Localizing Climate Change Action, Marianne Dellinger
Myanna Dellinger
Localizing Climate Change Action - abstract
Myanna Dellinger
Waiting for national- or supranational-level actors to take substantively effective action against climate change is like waiting for Godot: unlikely to happen, at least at a substantively early enough point in time. The December 2012 negotiations under the UNFCCC umbrella yet again demonstrated the failure of action at the international level. This article adds new value to existing scholarship by conducting original research into select climate initiatives at the subnational, substate level in order to find out whether it is worth pursuing climate change action at this level instead. The article posits …
International Trade And Investment Law And Carbon Management Technologies, Shi-Ling Hsu
International Trade And Investment Law And Carbon Management Technologies, Shi-Ling Hsu
Shi-Ling Hsu
Reducing emissions of greenhouse gases will require the development of carbon management technologies that are not currently available or that are not currently cost-effective. While market mechanisms such as carbon pricing must play a central role in stimulating the development of these technologies, governmental policy aimed at fostering carbon management technologies and lowering their costs must also play a part. Both types of policies will form part of an optimal greenhouse gas control portfolio.
This article develops a framework of international trade and investment law insofar as they may affect carbon management technologies. While it is commonly perceived that international …
The Legal Profession’S Critical Role In Systems-Level Bioenergy Decision-Making, Jody M. Endres
The Legal Profession’S Critical Role In Systems-Level Bioenergy Decision-Making, Jody M. Endres
Jody M. Endres
Mounting resource scarcity confronts policymakers to make decisions based on predictions of complex system behavior under conditions of great uncertainty. Nowhere is this more evident than in bioenergy policy, which relies heavily on modeling to determine biofuels’ effects on complex climate, food and natural systems. This article provides a primer on models’ inner workings to facilitate engagement by the legal field so critical in building and applying models, and remedying them when they fail. Any conceptual model cannot predict future reality with accuracy absent accounting for regulatory and litigatory scenarios that only the legal discipline can assess fully. Administrative law …
Frayed Seams In The "Patchwork Quilt" Of American Federalism: An Empirical Analysis Of Invasive Plant Species Regulation, A. Bryan Endres, James S.N. Mccubbins, Lauren D. Quinn, Jacob N. Barney
Frayed Seams In The "Patchwork Quilt" Of American Federalism: An Empirical Analysis Of Invasive Plant Species Regulation, A. Bryan Endres, James S.N. Mccubbins, Lauren D. Quinn, Jacob N. Barney
A. Bryan Endres
Increased demand for biomass feedstocks to meet renewable energy mandates will require development of newer, bigger and better plant resources. Ideal biomass traits–fast growth and ability to outcompete local vegetation, prolific seed production, adaptability to a variety of soil and climatic conditions, and resistance to pests and diseases–also typify invasive flora. Next-generation biofuel feedstocks may be more productive and profitable at the individual farm level, but also may pose a greater risk of becoming invasive, thereby damaging the broader ecosystem and the economy. Accordingly, the agronomist’s search for yield maximizing biofuel crops for deployment into novel agricultural production systems and …
Building Bio-Based Supply Chains: Theoretical Perspectives On Innovative Contract Design, A. Bryan Endres, Jody M. Endres, Jeremy J. Stoller
Building Bio-Based Supply Chains: Theoretical Perspectives On Innovative Contract Design, A. Bryan Endres, Jody M. Endres, Jeremy J. Stoller
A. Bryan Endres
By 2030, the United States will consume over 300 million tons of forest and agricultural feedstocks for energy production. The supply chain necessary to provide unprecedented quantities of new “bioenergy crops,” however, is fraught with uncertainty. The vertically integrated model the nascent sector currently uses may have limited opportunity for expansion to meet renewable energy mandates. A hybrid structure is likely to emerge as the industry evolves, in which end-users closely cooperate with a large number of heterogeneous producers through long-term contracting rather than as direct owners or operators of biomass farms. This “vertically coordinated” industry model is dependent on …
Raising Cane: Sugar Sugarcane Ethanol’S Economic And Environmental Effects On The United States, Jonathan M. Specht
Raising Cane: Sugar Sugarcane Ethanol’S Economic And Environmental Effects On The United States, Jonathan M. Specht
Jonathan M Specht
In the coming decades the United States will need to change its energy policy to face two enormous challenges: adjusting to peak oil (declining petroleum production output), and halting the advance of climate change. Liquid biofuels — made from renewable, biologically-based sources of energy, rather than finite and climate change-inducing fossil fuels — will be an important component of any strategy to deal with the twin challenges of peak oil and climate change. While the United States has encouraged the production of biofuels in recent decades, the domestic ethanol industry, which is almost entirely corn-based, has a number of major …
Raising Cane: Cuban Sugarcane Ethanol’S Economic And Environmental Effects On The United States, Jonathan M. Specht
Raising Cane: Cuban Sugarcane Ethanol’S Economic And Environmental Effects On The United States, Jonathan M. Specht
Jonathan M Specht
In the coming decades the United States will need to change its energy policy to face two enormous challenges: adjusting to peak oil (declining petroleum production output), and halting the advance of climate change. Liquid biofuels — made from renewable, biologically-based sources of energy, rather than finite and climate change-inducing fossil fuels — will be an important component of any strategy to deal with the twin challenges of peak oil and climate change. While the United States has encouraged the production of biofuels in recent decades, the domestic ethanol industry, which is almost entirely corn-based, has a number of major …
Raising Cane: Sugar Sugarcane Ethanol’S Economic And Environmental Effects On The United States, Jonathan M. Specht
Raising Cane: Sugar Sugarcane Ethanol’S Economic And Environmental Effects On The United States, Jonathan M. Specht
Jonathan M Specht
In the coming decades the United States will need to change its energy policy to face two enormous challenges: adjusting to peak oil (declining petroleum production output), and halting the advance of climate change. Liquid biofuels — made from renewable, biologically-based sources of energy, rather than finite and climate change-inducing fossil fuels — will be an important component of any strategy to deal with the twin challenges of peak oil and climate change. While the United States has encouraged the production of biofuels in recent decades, the domestic ethanol industry, which is almost entirely corn-based, has a number of major …
Using Building Codes To Rewrite The Tailoring Rule And Mitigate Climate Change, Albert Monroe
Using Building Codes To Rewrite The Tailoring Rule And Mitigate Climate Change, Albert Monroe
Albert Monroe
In 2007, Mass. v. EPA effectively forced the EPA to regulate emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. The plain language of the Clean Air Act gave the EPA an impossible mandate of regulating millions of buildings on a case-by-case basis. The EPA, through the Tailoring Rule, decided to regulate fewer sources. This paper shows that the EPA’s approach is legally suspect. Instead, the EPA should regulate more sources using general permits that avoid the impossibility of case-by-case regulation of millions of sources. The EPA can regulate buildings under the Clean Air Act by mandating stricter building codes for …
Managed Cooperation In A Post-Sago Mine Disaster World, Patrick R. Baker
Managed Cooperation In A Post-Sago Mine Disaster World, Patrick R. Baker
Patrick R. Baker
This article proposes a mandatory mediation process as a solution to solving the case backlog before the Federal Mine Safety Health and Review Commission (Commission). As a result of the Sago Mine disaster, cases before the Commission have skyrocketed because of tougher Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) oversight, increased penalties, and outdated procedures. From 2000 through 2005, approximately 2,300 cases were filed each year with the Commission. In 2011, the Commission’s case load exceeded 18,000. The system is currently in peril and significant reforms are needed if the current procedures are salvageable. This article has four central components. First, …
Takings And Transmission, Alexandra B. Klass
Takings And Transmission, Alexandra B. Klass
Alexandra B. Klass
Ever since the Supreme Court’s controversial 2005 decision in Kelo v. City of New London, courts, state legislatures, and the public have scrutinized eminent domain actions like never before. Such scrutiny has focused, for the most part, on the now-controversial “economic development” or “public purpose” takings involved in the Kelo case itself, where government takes private property to convey it to another private party who promises to develop the property in a way that will increase the tax base, create new jobs, assist in urban renewal, or otherwise provide economic or social benefits to the public. By contrast, until recently, …
Rationalizing Risks To Cultural Loss In Resource Development, Sari M. Graben
Rationalizing Risks To Cultural Loss In Resource Development, Sari M. Graben
Sari M Graben
Abstract In this article, I consider the implications of culture for valuation of cultural loss in cost benefit analysis. I argue that rational choice models have a difficult time quantifying cultural values because they have yet to grapple with the way experts tasked with cost benefit analysis translate knowledge about cultural worldviews for the purposes of comparison. This translation can alter the valuation of the risk so as to undermine the representation of a loss, rather than identify it. However, instead of rejecting the consideration of cultural loss in cost-benefit analysis outright, I build on dialogical approaches to governance that …
Hydropower: It's A Small World After All, Gina Warren
Hydropower: It's A Small World After All, Gina Warren
Gina Warren
Global warming is here. As exhibited by the recent droughts, heat waves, severe storms and floods, climate change is no longer a question for the future, but a problem for the present. Of the many ways to help combat climate change, this article discusses the use of the most abundant renewable energy source on the plant – water. While large-scale hydropower (think Hoover Dam) is unlikely to see increased development due to its negative impact on the environment, fish, and wildlife, small-scale hydropower (think a highly technologically-advanced water mill) is environmentally-friendly and would produce clean, renewable energy to benefit local …
"You Must Remember This:" Nothing Lasts A Hundred Years, David D. Butler
"You Must Remember This:" Nothing Lasts A Hundred Years, David D. Butler
David D. Butler
This 827 word essay speaks for itself. Even more pared down, it argues that much of what we think about as "natural," is the product of human design. Using Northern California's Crystal Springs Reservoir as its illustration, the essay points out the fragile human artifice which creates what successive generations view as "natural."
Dam Breaching In The Pacific Northwest: Lessons For The Nation, Michael Blumm
Dam Breaching In The Pacific Northwest: Lessons For The Nation, Michael Blumm
Michael Blumm
Over the past dozen years, a number of large dams in the Pacific Northwest have been removed in an effort to restore riverine ecosystems and dependent species like salmon. These dam removals provide perhaps the best example of large-scale environmental remediation in the 21st century. This restoration, however, has occurred on a case-by-case basis, without a comprehensive plan. Yet the result has been to put into motion ongoing rehabilitation efforts in four distinct river basins: the Elwah and White Salmon in Washington and the Sandy and Rogue in Oregon. In all, nine significant dams have been removed, and four more—in …
The Ferc's Vintage And Original Purpose Doctrine For Transmission Pricing, Larry Blank
The Ferc's Vintage And Original Purpose Doctrine For Transmission Pricing, Larry Blank
Larry Blank
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has sanctioned a new “doctrine” for ratemaking by approving PJM-RTO’s modified zonal transmission rates. Here, an interconnected transmission network owner recovers all the costs of its existing transmission facilities from customers physically located within its own zone – even though those from other zones within the RTO benefit from using these facilities – while the costs of new facilities are allocated to beneficiaries across all zones within RTO. The FERC’s decision was partly based on the faulty premise that existing-transmission-facility costs are sunk; the resulting subsidized transmission rates are discriminatory thwarting future RTO development and …
The Role Of The Law In The Availability Of Public Transit And Affordable Housing In Atlanta’S West End, Elliott Lipinsky
The Role Of The Law In The Availability Of Public Transit And Affordable Housing In Atlanta’S West End, Elliott Lipinsky
ELLIOTT LIPINSKY
Single family home prices in West End will remain below $250,000 on average due to the generous grants and investment incentives provided by the City of Atlanta and the State of Georgia. Atlanta wants to create affordable, well-designed urban housing. This housing will provide anyone in Atlanta an affordable place to live. The West End is the perfect example of the City’s attempts to create such an environment. Furthermore, the Sky Lofts of West End offer brand new affordable housing in the West End through developer grants, tax abatements, and down payment loans. These government-created incentives have provided affordable housing …
What’S Blowin’ In The Wind? The Use Of Coal Ash In Landfills And The Power Of Local Governments To Stop It, Charlie Schmidt
What’S Blowin’ In The Wind? The Use Of Coal Ash In Landfills And The Power Of Local Governments To Stop It, Charlie Schmidt
Charlie Schmidt
This paper addresses the use of Coal Combustion By-product (AKA coal ash) as approved "fill" product for landfills. Specifically, it addresses the overlap of Federal, State, and Municipal land use laws as these apply to landfills abutting residential areas. Coal Ash has been approved by the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) to use as fill material in landfills. Recently, the Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA) for the County of Henrico, VA, just east of Richmond, VA, rejected a zoning permit to allow East End Resource Recovery (EERR) to import, collect, and store coal ash on site for use as …
Walking The Tightrope: Balancing Conservation, Local Growth, And The Uncertainty Of Rural Development, Michael A. Powell
Walking The Tightrope: Balancing Conservation, Local Growth, And The Uncertainty Of Rural Development, Michael A. Powell
Michael A Powell
Economic development is a complex issue, and placing it in a rural context complicates it further, primarily due to issues with local governance and the difficulty in defining the term “rural.” The result is that economic development policies often ignore development in rural areas, and development in those areas becomes uncoordinated and unproductive. One exception is the Growth Management Act (GMA) enacted by the State of Washington, which established a rural development regime that decentralized planning but retained regional and statewide oversight. This paper uses a lawsuit filed against one of the GMA’s regional boards as a case study to …
Dormancy Versus Innovation: A New Generation Dormant Commerce Clause, Sam Kalen Mr.
Dormancy Versus Innovation: A New Generation Dormant Commerce Clause, Sam Kalen Mr.
Sam Kalen Mr.
The vitality of the dormant commerce clause is becoming increasingly suspect. Modern academic commentary questions the Supreme Court’s rationale for this negative aspect of the Commerce Clause. Yet the emphasis of the scholarship overlooks how our society has changed dramatically since the Court developed its present analysis, and it is the analysis perhaps more than the rationale that is bankrupt. The analysis the Court employs under the clause is cabining innovate state and local programs, such as responses to climate change. The article, therefore, traces the dynamic nature of the dormant commerce clause, as well as how its modern formulation …
Delayed Justice: A Case Study Of Texaco Arnd The Republic Of Ecuador’S Operations, Harms, And Possible Redress In The Ecuadorian Amazon, Suraj Patel
Suraj Patel
Multinational corporations engaging in natural resource extraction are often enticed by nascent foreign regulatory regimes and private dispute settlement mechanisms intended to induce investment. The result of a complicit government and poor operational practices can be environmental devastation and widespread human rights violations for which there is little redress. This paper analyzes the challenges inherent in using private dispute resolution mechanisms to hold corporations accountable for regulatory violations through the lens of Texaco’s 30-year operations in the Ecuadorian Amazon and the Aguinda v Chevron litigations in New York and subsequently Ecuador. The case represents the one of the most significant …
Neither Magic Bullet Nor Lost Cause: Land Titling And The Wealth Of Nations, Scott Shackelford
Neither Magic Bullet Nor Lost Cause: Land Titling And The Wealth Of Nations, Scott Shackelford
Scott Shackelford
This Article offers a critique of land titling movements. Formalizing property rights is a popular idea. Endorsements range from Ronald Coase, Milton Friedman, Francis Fukayama, and Jeanne Kirkpatrick, to David Owen, and Margaret Thatcher. This Article seeks to determine whether such widespread praise is justified based on an analysis of the available empirical literature on the subject. I argue that instead of property rights formalization being a panacea cure for alleviating poverty in the developing world, it is but one part of a more holistic process of legal reform that is required before economic development might be catalyzed and property …
The Impact Xat, Paul Boudreaux
The Impact Xat, Paul Boudreaux
Paul Boudreaux
At a time when the economy and the housing market rise and fall together, the phenomenon of impact fees complicates the construction of new housing across the nation. Although justified as a means of forcing new development to “pay its way” for the costs of government infrastructure necessitated by the new housing, impact fees typically are imposed in a way that makes them, in effect, a dubious population tax. Indeed, the typical fee does little to discourage costly suburban sprawl. This essay – using economic lessons from policies that discourage usage of scarce resources with light bulbs, bathrooms, and buildings …
Tribal Energy Resource Agreements: The Unintended "Great Mischief For Indian Energy Development" And The Resulting Need For Reform, Elizabeth Kronk
Tribal Energy Resource Agreements: The Unintended "Great Mischief For Indian Energy Development" And The Resulting Need For Reform, Elizabeth Kronk
Elizabeth Kronk
Tribal Energy Resource Agreements: The Unintended “Great Mischief for Indian Energy Development” and the Resulting Need for Reform By: Elizabeth Ann Kronk Article Abstract Today, despite political acrimony on many domestic issues, both political parties and the majority of the American public seem to agree that the country should find new, domestic sources of energy. When looking for potential domestic energy resources, Indian country stands out as ideal territory for various types of energy development, as “[t]he Bureau of Indian Affairs estimates that while Indian land comprises only five percent of the land area in the United States, it contains …
Expanding The Federal Common Law?: From Nomos & Physis And Beyond, Sam Kalen
Expanding The Federal Common Law?: From Nomos & Physis And Beyond, Sam Kalen
Sam Kalen Mr.
The Supreme Court’s recent decision in AEP v. Connecticut, as well as a prominent Seventh Circuit case last year, reflect an emerging effort to test the federal judiciary’s willingness to expand the federal common law to include claims for interstate pollution. There is an assumption, including by the Supreme Court, that a federal common law for public nuisance exists, and that the pressing question is whether to expand that common law. Building on existing scholarship and a more thorough review of the cases than has occurred in the past, this article attempts to prompt a searching dialogue about the jurisprudential …
The Impact Xat, Paul Boudreaux
The Impact Xat, Paul Boudreaux
Paul Boudreaux
At a time when the economy and the housing market rise and fall together, the phenomenon of impact fees complicates the construction of new housing across the nation. Although justified as a means of forcing new development to “pay its way” for the costs of government infrastructure necessitated by the new housing, impact fees typically are imposed in a way that makes them, in effect, a dubious population tax. Indeed, the typical fee does little to discourage costly suburban sprawl. This essay – using economic lessons from policies that discourage usage of scarce resources with light bulbs, bathrooms, and buildings …
Dormancy Versus Innovation: A Next Generation Dormant Commerce Clause, Sam Kalen
Dormancy Versus Innovation: A Next Generation Dormant Commerce Clause, Sam Kalen
Sam Kalen Mr.
The vitality of the dormant commerce clause is becoming increasingly suspect. Modern academic commentary questions the Supreme Court’s rationale for this negative aspect of the Commerce Clause. Yet the emphasis of the scholarship overlooks how our society has changed dramatically since the Court developed its present analysis, and it is the analysis perhaps more than the rationale that is bankrupt. The analysis the Court employs under the clause is cabining innovate state and local programs, such as responses to climate change. The article, therefore, traces the dynamic nature of the dormant commerce clause, how its modern formulation ignores societal changes …
Tribal Energy Resource Agreements: The Unintended “Great Mischief For Indian Energy Development” And The Resulting Need For Reform, Elizabeth Ann Kronk
Tribal Energy Resource Agreements: The Unintended “Great Mischief For Indian Energy Development” And The Resulting Need For Reform, Elizabeth Ann Kronk
Elizabeth Kronk
Tribal Energy Resource Agreements: The Unintended “Great Mischief for Indian Energy Development” and the Resulting Need for Reform By: Elizabeth Ann Kronk Article Abstract Today, despite political acrimony on many domestic issues, both political parties and the majority of the American public seem to agree that the country should find new, domestic sources of energy. When looking for potential domestic energy resources, Indian country stands out as ideal territory for various types of energy development, as “[t]he Bureau of Indian Affairs estimates that while Indian land comprises only five percent of the land area in the United States, it contains …