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Environmental Law Commons

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Texas A&M University School of Law

Journal

2018

Climate change

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Environmental Law

Carrots And Sticks In Private Climate Governance, Jonathan Gilligan Jan 2018

Carrots And Sticks In Private Climate Governance, Jonathan Gilligan

Texas A&M Law Review

When public governance fails to address important environmental threats— such as climate change—private governance by firms, not-for-profits, individuals, and households can produce significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Private governance can take the form of either a carrot or a stick, using incentives or punishments. Shareholder activism as a form of private governance of corporations has largely been confrontational, leading most climate-related actions to fail. This Article examines the potential for private governance to take a more collaborative approach and to frame shareholder engagement with management in terms of opportunity. It also examines private governance successes at reducing household emissions …


Regulatory Carrots And Sticks In Climate Policy: Some Political Economic Observations, Jason S. Johnston Jan 2018

Regulatory Carrots And Sticks In Climate Policy: Some Political Economic Observations, Jason S. Johnston

Texas A&M Law Review

This Article sets out an informal political economic theory which explains the relative permanence of regulatory carrots—legislative subsidies and mandates for product use—versus the transience of regulatory sticks—traditional costly regulatory requirements. After setting out the elements of this theory, I illustrate it with the dramatic rise in the Obama Administration and abrupt cessation in the Trump Administration of attempts to use conventional U.S. environmental regulatory sticks to end the U.S. coal industry. The Article turns then to describe a concrete example of a regulatory carrot—the U.S. corn ethanol mandate—that has survived despite overwhelming evidence that its environmental benefits, if any, …