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Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Law
Environmental Law At The Borders, J.B. Ruhl
Environmental Law At The Borders, J.B. Ruhl
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
Pipelines to the north. Walls to the south. Between President Trump's issuance of a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline crossing from Canada and his promise to build "The Wall," the politics of our national borders rarely have been in as much turmoil as they are today. And as with any infrastructure project, environmental policy has been deeply in play all the way. But the environmental law of the borders might surprise you. Indeed, arguably there isn't any for these two projects.
The Role Of Law In Adaptive Governance, J.B. Ruhl, Barbara A. Cosens, Robin K. Craig, Shana L. Hirsch
The Role Of Law In Adaptive Governance, J.B. Ruhl, Barbara A. Cosens, Robin K. Craig, Shana L. Hirsch
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
The term “governance” encompasses both governmental and nongovernmental participation in collective choice and action. Law dictates the structure, boundaries, rules, and processes within which governmental action takes place, and in doing so becomes one of the focal points for analysis of barriers to adaptation as the effects of climate change are felt. Adaptive governance must therefore contemplate a level of flexibility and evolution in governmental action beyond that currently found in the heavily administrative governments of many democracies. Nevertheless, over time, law itself has proven highly adaptive in western systems of government, evolving to address and even facilitate the emergence …
Reconstituting The Federalism Battle In Energy Transportation, Jim Rossi, Alexandra B. Klass
Reconstituting The Federalism Battle In Energy Transportation, Jim Rossi, Alexandra B. Klass
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
This article explores the growing federalism tensions in efforts to expand the nation’s energy transportation infrastructure — the electric transmission lines, natural gas pipelines, natural gas import and export terminals and related infrastructure that power the U.S. electricity and transportation systems. It uses two illustrations — one involving an interstate electric transmission line (subject to state jurisdiction) and one involving and an interstate natural gas pipeline (subject to federal jurisdiction) — to highlight how the clear jurisdictional lines between federal and state authority over these projects created decades ago is no longer adequate for today’s energy needs. We believe that …
The Production Function Of The Regulatory State, J.B. Ruhl, Jonathan R. Nash, James Salzman
The Production Function Of The Regulatory State, J.B. Ruhl, Jonathan R. Nash, James Salzman
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
How much will our budget be cut be this year? This question has loomed ominously over regulatory agencies for over three decades. After the 2016 presidential election, it now stands front and center in federal policy, with the Trump administration pledging over $50 billion in cuts. Yet very little is known about the fundamental relationship between regulatory agencies budgets and the social welfare outcomes they are charged to produce. Indeed, the question is scarcely studied in scholarship from law, economics, or political science. This article lays the groundwork for a new field of theoretical and empirical research, using what we …
Carbon Taxation By Regulation, Jim Rossi
Carbon Taxation By Regulation, Jim Rossi
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
This Article argues that, even though a carbon tax remains politically elusive, a carbon taxation by regulation has begun to flourish as a way of financing carbon reduction. For more than a century, energy rate setting has been used to promote public good and redistributive goals, akin to general financial taxation. Various non-tax subsidies in customer energy rates have enormous untapped potential for promoting low-carbon sources of energy, while also balancing broader economic and social welfare goals. While carbon taxation by regulation offers many benefits, regulators' narrow fixation on consumer protection and economic goals has hobbled realization of its potential. …
Stranded Costs And Grid Decarbonization, Jim Rossi, Emily Hammond
Stranded Costs And Grid Decarbonization, Jim Rossi, Emily Hammond
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
Over the past half century, energy law has endured many stranded cost experiments, each helping firms and customers adjust to a new normal. However, these past experiments have contributed to a myopic regulatory approach to past stranded cost recovery by: (1) endorsing a preference for addressing all stranded costs only after energy resource investment decisions have been made; and (2) fixating on the firm’s financial costs and protection of investors, rather than on the broader impacts of each on the energy system.
The current transition to decarbonization is already giving rise to stranded cost claims related to existing energy assets …
Transforming (Perceived) Rigidity In Environmental Law Through Adaptive Governance, J.B. Ruhl, Hannah Gosnell, Brian C. Chaffin, Craig A. Arnold
Transforming (Perceived) Rigidity In Environmental Law Through Adaptive Governance, J.B. Ruhl, Hannah Gosnell, Brian C. Chaffin, Craig A. Arnold
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
The Endangered Species Act (ESA) is often portrayed as a major source of instability and crisis in river basins of the U. S. West, where the needs of listed fish species frequently clash with agriculture dependent on federal irrigation projects subject to ESA Section 7 prohibitions on federal agency actions likely to jeopardize listed species or adversely modify critical habitat. Scholarship on Section 7 characterizes the process as unwaveringly rigid, the legal hammer forcing federal agencies to consider endangered species needs when proposing operations and management plans for federally funded irrigation. In this paper, we identify barriers to an integrated …