Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Cities (1)
- Civil Rights Act of 1964 (1)
- Climate (1)
- Climate action planning (1)
- Climate alignment (1)
-
- Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) (1)
- Environmental justice (1)
- Equal Protection (1)
- Equity (1)
- Federal law (1)
- Fordham Urban Law Journal (1)
- Fracking regulation (1)
- GHG reduction mandate (1)
- Global Warming Response Act (GWRA) (1)
- Greenhouse gas (1)
- Greenhouse gas mitigation (1)
- Hydraulic fracturing (1)
- Inflation Reduction Act (1)
- Infrastructure & Jobs Investment Act (1)
- Justice40 (1)
- Local government (1)
- Local policy (1)
- Title IV (1)
- University of Pennsylvania Law Review Online (1)
- Wastewater (1)
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Legal Case For Equity In Local Climate Action Planning, Amy E. Turner
The Legal Case For Equity In Local Climate Action Planning, Amy E. Turner
Sabin Center for Climate Change Law
Over the last half decade, local climate action plans have regularly come to incorporate considerations of racial and socioeconomic equity, recognizing the ways in which low-income communities and communities of color experience earlier and worse consequences from global warming, and these communities are also at risk of being harmed by policies meant to address climate change. Until now, however, the discourse on equity in climate action planning has largely pertained to policy; it acknowledges the disproportionate harm that certain communities experience as a result of climate change and policies to address climate change, and suggests policy tools that can address …
Helping New Jersey State Agencies And Departments Align Their Actions With Ghg Reduction Mandates And Environmental Justice Principles, Jennifer Danis, Zoe Makoul
Helping New Jersey State Agencies And Departments Align Their Actions With Ghg Reduction Mandates And Environmental Justice Principles, Jennifer Danis, Zoe Makoul
Sabin Center for Climate Change Law
This white paper analyzes New Jersey’s implementation gap in both the climate and justice space. Its findings are potentially applicable to the many other states who have set climate and justice goals, without robustly embedding them into their existing legal and administrative landscapes. New Jersey already has GHG reduction targets, a plan, and mapped pathways. While more aggressive tactics and targets may be required to meet evolving scientific knowledge, and cost-effective technology and markets will evolve over time, New Jersey’s climate-alignment tools and pathways are clear. The EMP, the 2020 GWRA 80x50 Report, and EO-274, among other strong state initiatives, …
Fracking And Federalism Choice, Michael Burger
Fracking And Federalism Choice, Michael Burger
Sabin Center for Climate Change Law
In response to David B. Spence's "Federalism, Regulatory Lags, and the Political Economy of Energy Production," I offer a set of constructive challenges to his article. In Part I, I argue that fracking’s federalism-choice question has already been answered, and that but for the outdated and underjustified exemptions mentioned above, fracking is already under the jurisdiction of federal regulators. In Part II, I conduct an alternative federalism-choice analysis that adds to Professor Spence’s analysis in three ways. First, I balance his analysis by examining rationales commonly used to justify decentralization, rather than federalization, of environmental law. Second, I argue that …