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Public Law and Legal Theory

Selected Works

Robin K. Craig

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Law

Administrative Law In The Roberts Court: The First Four Years, Robin K. Craig Sep 2009

Administrative Law In The Roberts Court: The First Four Years, Robin K. Craig

Robin K. Craig

Given Justice David Souter’s retirement in the summer of 2009, the four U.S. Supreme Court terms that began in October 2005 and ended in June 2009 constitute a first distinct phase of the Roberts Court. During those first four terms, moreover, the Court decided a number of cases relevant to the practice and structure of administrative law.

This Article provides a comprehensive survey and summary of the Supreme Court’s administrative-law-related decisions issued during this first phase of the Roberts Court. It organizes those decisions into three categories. Part I of this Article discusses the Supreme Court decisions that affect access …


A Comparative Guide To The Western States' Public Trust Doctrine: Public Values, Private Rights, And The Evolution Toward An Environmental Public Trust, Robin K. Craig May 2009

A Comparative Guide To The Western States' Public Trust Doctrine: Public Values, Private Rights, And The Evolution Toward An Environmental Public Trust, Robin K. Craig

Robin K. Craig

This companion article to the Fall 2007 A Comparative Guide to the Eastern Public Trust Doctrines explores the state public trust doctrines – emphasis on the plural – in the 19 western states. In so doing, this Article seeks to make the larger point that, while the broad contours of the public trust doctrine, especially regarding state ownership of the beds and banks of navigable waters, have a federal law basis, the details of how public trust principles actually apply vary considerably from state to state. Public trust law, in other words, is very much a species of state common …


"Stationarity Is Dead" -- Long Live Transformation: Five Principles For Climate Change Adaptation Law, Robin K. Craig Mar 2009

"Stationarity Is Dead" -- Long Live Transformation: Five Principles For Climate Change Adaptation Law, Robin K. Craig

Robin K. Craig


While there is no question that successful mitigation strategies remain critical in the quest to avoid worst-case climate change scenarios, we’ve passed the point where mitigation efforts alone can deal with the problems that climate change is creating. Because of “committed” warming – climate change that will occur regardless of mitigation measures, a result of the already-accumulated greenhouse gases in the atmosphere – what happens to social-ecological systems over the next decades, and most likely over the next few centuries, will largely be beyond human control. The time to start preparing for these changes is now, by making adaptation part …


Justice Kennedy And Ecosystem Services: A Functional Approach To Clean Water Act Jurisdiction After Rapanos, Robin K. Craig Feb 2008

Justice Kennedy And Ecosystem Services: A Functional Approach To Clean Water Act Jurisdiction After Rapanos, Robin K. Craig

Robin K. Craig

Justice Kennedy’s “significant nexus” test may emerge as the proverbial silver lining of the U.S. Supreme Court’s June 2006 decision in Rapanos v. United States, at least so far as recognition of ecosystem services is concerned. The Court’s opinion in Rapanos was fractured. Nevertheless, it left no doubts that the Clean Water Act’s jurisdiction over “navigable waters” had been limited, drawing criticism for both its lack of clarity and its restriction of federal jurisdiction under the Act.

The extent of that restriction, however, would depend on which of the three major opinion’s in the case – Justice Scalia’s plurality, Justice …


Climate Change, Regulatory Fragmentation, And Water Triage, Robin K. Craig Sep 2007

Climate Change, Regulatory Fragmentation, And Water Triage, Robin K. Craig

Robin K. Craig

Fresh water is a regulatorily fragmented resource – that is, water is subject to multiple assertions of regulatory authority and to multiple types of use right claims that those authorities regulate. As fresh water supplies become increasingly unequal to task of meeting the multiple demands for both consumptive and in situ use, and as consumptive and in situ uses of water come increasingly into irreconcilable conflict, the various regulatory schemes governing water have also increasingly come into legal conflict. These courtroom battles have revealed many tensions, overlaps, and gaps in the overall governance of water as a natural resource, especially …


A Comparative Guide To The Eastern Public Trust Doctrines: Classifications Of States, Property Rights, And State Summaries, Robin K. Craig Aug 2007

A Comparative Guide To The Eastern Public Trust Doctrines: Classifications Of States, Property Rights, And State Summaries, Robin K. Craig

Robin K. Craig

Public trust doctrine literature to date has displayed two distinct tendencies, both of which limit comprehensive discussion of the American public trust doctrines. At one end of the spectrum, articles focused on broader legal principles tend to discuss the public trust doctrine, as though a single public trust doctrine pervaded the United States. At the other end, articles focus on how one particular state implements its particular state public trust doctrine. Few articles have grappled with the richness and complexity of public trust philosophies that more comparative approaches to the nation’s public trust doctrines – emphasis on the plural – …