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Articles 31 - 60 of 83

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Reauthorization Of Superfund: Can The Deal Of The Century Be Saved?, Rena I. Steinzor Nov 2009

The Reauthorization Of Superfund: Can The Deal Of The Century Be Saved?, Rena I. Steinzor

Rena I. Steinzor

No abstract provided.


The Corruption Of Civic Environmentalism, Rena I. Steinzor Nov 2009

The Corruption Of Civic Environmentalism, Rena I. Steinzor

Rena I. Steinzor

No abstract provided.


Toward Better Bubbles And Future Lives: A Progressive Response To The Conservative Agenda For Reforming Environmental Law, Rena I. Steinzor Nov 2009

Toward Better Bubbles And Future Lives: A Progressive Response To The Conservative Agenda For Reforming Environmental Law, Rena I. Steinzor

Rena I. Steinzor

No abstract provided.


The Legacy Of John Graham: Strait-Jacketing Risk Assessment, Rena I. Steinzor Nov 2009

The Legacy Of John Graham: Strait-Jacketing Risk Assessment, Rena I. Steinzor

Rena I. Steinzor

No abstract provided.


A Perfect Storm: Mercury And The Bush Administration, Part Ii, Rena I. Steinzor, Lisa Heinzerling Oct 2009

A Perfect Storm: Mercury And The Bush Administration, Part Ii, Rena I. Steinzor, Lisa Heinzerling

Rena I. Steinzor

The Environmental Protection Agency's recent proposal to regulate mercury emissions from power plants, and its final rule on mercury emissions from chlor-alkali facilities, suffer from serious scientific, legal, economic, and distributional flaws. The first installment in this series examined the strong scientific basis for regulating mercury emissions and critiqued the agency's decisions from a legal perspective. This second (and final) installment finds that EPA's decisions also fail from the perspectives of economics and environmental justice. EPA and the Office of Management and Budget's economic analysis of the proposal to regulate mercury from power plants was shoddy and one-sided. EPA and …


Oversight Hearing On The Federal Superfund Program's Activities To Protect Public Health, Rena Steinzor Oct 2009

Oversight Hearing On The Federal Superfund Program's Activities To Protect Public Health, Rena Steinzor

Rena I. Steinzor

No abstract provided.


A Perfect Storm: Mercury And The Bush Administration, Rena Steinzor, Lisa Heinzerling Oct 2009

A Perfect Storm: Mercury And The Bush Administration, Rena Steinzor, Lisa Heinzerling

Rena I. Steinzor

In December 2003, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed a rule for mercury emissions from power plants and issued a final rule for mercury emissions from chlor-alkali facilities. Regarding power plants, EPA had previously found that mercury posed the most serious threat among the hazardous air pollutants emitted by power plants, and also that regulation of mercury from power plants was appropriate and necessary under section 112 of the Clean Air Act, which requires stringent technology-based regulation for hazardous air pollutants. Despite section 112's clear rejection of emissions trading as a compliance option, EPA has proposed to allow commercial trading …


U.S. Supreme Court Environmental Cases 2008-2009: A Year Like No Other, James R. May Sep 2009

U.S. Supreme Court Environmental Cases 2008-2009: A Year Like No Other, James R. May

James R. May

The author of this article says the last term of the U.S. Supreme Court was in many respects like no other in modern environmental law. During the 2008-2009 term, the Supreme Court ruled on novel and important questions concerning preliminary injunctions under the National Environmental Policy Act; cost-benefit analyses and permitting under the Clean Water Act; arranger and joint and several liability under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act; and environmental standing. At no turn, says the author, did the court favor the environment over other interests. He says the court even reached down to reverse decisions in …


A Theoretical Justification For Special Solicitude: States And The Administrative State, Matthew Melamed Sep 2009

A Theoretical Justification For Special Solicitude: States And The Administrative State, Matthew Melamed

Matthew S Melamed

In Massachusetts v. EPA, the Court declared that the state of Massachusetts, because it sought to protect a quasi-sovereign interest, was “entitled to special solicitude in our standing analysis.” The discussion of special solicitude consisted of little more than one page in the Court’s opinion. This paper addresses the question of whether a theoretical justification for special solicitude for state standing exists, and finds that it does.

The strongest argument for special solicitude is rooted in federalist concerns, though not the concerns that provide the foundation for originalist states’ rights theories. While traditional states’ rights arguments seek to restrict federal …


Intergovernmental Coordination Of Power Development And Environmental Protection Act, Garrett Power Sep 2009

Intergovernmental Coordination Of Power Development And Environmental Protection Act, Garrett Power

Garrett Power

No abstract provided.


More About Oysters Than You Wanted To Know, Garrett Power Sep 2009

More About Oysters Than You Wanted To Know, Garrett Power

Garrett Power

No abstract provided.


Chesapeake Waters: Pollution, Public Health, And Public Opinion, 1607-1972, John Capper, Garrett Power, Frank Shivers Sep 2009

Chesapeake Waters: Pollution, Public Health, And Public Opinion, 1607-1972, John Capper, Garrett Power, Frank Shivers

Garrett Power

Preface The Chesapeake Bay is the most studied and best understood estuary in the United States. Yet, it is practically unexamined in the areas of the social sciences and the humanities. While millions of dollars have been spent on producing the thousands of studies that examine the physical, biological, chemical, and engineering aspects of the Bay, little attention has been given to understanding the political, cultural, and economic character of Bay governance. The relationship of the governments of Maryland and Virginia to the Bay is imperfectly documented. Government documents which do exist are scattered in various libraries in both states …


Corn, Carbon, And Conservation: Rethinking U.S. Agricultural Policy In A Changing Global Environment, Mary Jane Angelo Aug 2009

Corn, Carbon, And Conservation: Rethinking U.S. Agricultural Policy In A Changing Global Environment, Mary Jane Angelo

Mary Jane Angelo

ABSTRACT

CORN, CARBON AND CONSERVATION: RETHINKING U.S. AGRICULTURAL POLICY IN A CHANGING GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT

Mary Jane Angelo

In the past few years, the public has renewed its interest in ensuring that the food it eats is healthy and is grown in ways that are environmentally and economically sustainable. The immense popularity of books such as The Omnivore’s Dilemma, the widespread “locavore” movement, First Lady Michelle Obama’s White House lawn vegetable garden, concerns over genetically modified crops, rising food prices, growing concerns over the government’s misguided policy to promote corn ethanol, and the climate change crisis have refocused the public’s attention …


Legal Theory And The Anthropocene Challenge: The Implications Of Law, Science, And Policy For Weapons Of Mass Destruction And Climate Change, Winston P. Nagan, Judit K. Otvos Aug 2009

Legal Theory And The Anthropocene Challenge: The Implications Of Law, Science, And Policy For Weapons Of Mass Destruction And Climate Change, Winston P. Nagan, Judit K. Otvos

Winston P Nagan

No abstract provided.


Global Warming: A Second Coming For International Law?, Deepa Badrinarayana Aug 2009

Global Warming: A Second Coming For International Law?, Deepa Badrinarayana

Deepa Badrinarayana

This paper analyzes the role of international law in addressing global warming through the lens of a select number of compliance theories and rational choice theory. It presents an alternative view to the limits of international law in addressing climate change, i.e., that international law has created an economic dependency that has constrained the space for pursuit of traditional legal rights. In making this argument, this article examines the history oil exploration and climate policy. The article also makes some brief suggestions towards increasing the space for traditional legal rights.


Legal Techniques For Dealing With Scientific Uncertainty: The Contribution Of International Environmental Law, Jorge E. Vinuales Aug 2009

Legal Techniques For Dealing With Scientific Uncertainty: The Contribution Of International Environmental Law, Jorge E. Vinuales

Jorge E Vinuales

The article analyzes how scientific uncertainty is handled in international environmental law. The author identifies ten legal techniques used for this purpose (i.e. precautionary reasoning, framework-protocol approach, advisory scientific bodies, law-making by treaty bodies, managerial approaches to compliance, prior informed consent, environmental impact assessment and monitoring, provisional measures, evidence, and facilitated liability) and link them to four different stages of the development of environmental regimes (i.e. advocacy, design, implementation, reparation). These techniques are illustrated by reference to some fifteen environmental treaties and other instruments, as well as through a detailed case-study focusing on the climate change regime.


Antibiotics In Food Animals: The Convergence Of Animal And Public Health, Science, Policy, Politics And The Law, Nancy Halpern Jul 2009

Antibiotics In Food Animals: The Convergence Of Animal And Public Health, Science, Policy, Politics And The Law, Nancy Halpern

Nancy E Halpern D.V.M.

ANTIBIOTICS IN FOOD ANIMALS: THE CONVERGENCE OF ANIMAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH, SCIENCE, POLICY, POLITICS AND THE LAW

BY NANCY E HALPERN, DVM

MAY 3, 2009

ABSTRACT

The use of antibiotics in food animals, to prevent and/or control disease in these animals, has been a subject of discussion between the medical and veterinary and animal agricultural sectors and related national and international government entities for decades, because of concerns about the resulting increase in antibiotic resistance such practices facilitate. The underlying premise is that use of antibiotics in food animals leads to resistance of the bacteria consumed by humans, and reducing …


Trampling The Public Trust, Debra Donahue Jul 2009

Trampling The Public Trust, Debra Donahue

Debra L. Donahue

Many ecological problems in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem can be traced to livestock production politics. Federal land managers and state wildlife agencies refuse to address the root causes of these problems and seek ecological solutions. They pursue management policies driven, not by science or law, but by an institutionalized relationship with livestock interests. This article describes three pressing ecological issues--predator control, elk and bison supplemental feeding, and climate change--and explains how public land grazing causes or contributes to each problem and frustrates solutions. The article argues that current management policies violate state duties as trustee for the people’s wildlife and …


Ldeq Executive Philosophy Under Secretary Hal Leggett: Team Building Politics Vs. Policy, Beau James Brock Jun 2009

Ldeq Executive Philosophy Under Secretary Hal Leggett: Team Building Politics Vs. Policy, Beau James Brock

Beau James Brock

A powerpoint overview of the LDEQ Leggett Adminstration's policy agenda and its mission to overcome inherent political bureaucracy.


A Weed By Any Other Name: Would The Rose Smell As Sweet If It Were A Threat To Biodiversity?, Sophie Riley Apr 2009

A Weed By Any Other Name: Would The Rose Smell As Sweet If It Were A Threat To Biodiversity?, Sophie Riley

Sophie Riley

ABSTRACT Defining and determining what amounts to an invasive alien species has always been a challenging task for states. In particular, where a species is regarded as a resource by one product sector or regime, but considered harmful by another sector or regime, States must often balance or compromise competing claims. Such is the case with respect to the emerging issue of biofuels. Biofuels which are plants from which precursor alcohols such as methanol and ethanol are distilled are seen by states as a potential solution to the problems of climate change and the energy crisis. Yet, many plant species …


Sustainable Trends Offer Reason For Hope In Pennsylvania And Nation, John Dernbach Mar 2009

Sustainable Trends Offer Reason For Hope In Pennsylvania And Nation, John Dernbach

John C. Dernbach

No abstract provided.


Delaware Energy Plan: 2009‐2014, David R. Hodas Mar 2009

Delaware Energy Plan: 2009‐2014, David R. Hodas

David R. Hodas

No abstract provided.


Waste Not, Want Not: Economic And Legal Challenges Of Regulation-Induced Innovation In Waste Technology And Management, Molly Macauley Mar 2009

Waste Not, Want Not: Economic And Legal Challenges Of Regulation-Induced Innovation In Waste Technology And Management, Molly Macauley

Molly Macauley

Regulation to protect public health and the environment has transformed the “town dump” into large, regional state-of-the art waste disposal facilities managed by a nationwide industry with revenues of over $40 billion annually. Responsibility for waste regulation rests with state and local authorities, however, and their intervention in price, quantity, and location attributes of the market has prompted legal challenges under the dormant commerce clause. This article reviews the regulation-induced changes in the market, its subnational governmental oversight, and protection of interstate commerce when new technology restructures a local service into a national business.


Sustainable America Is Achievable In Our Lifetime, John Dernbach Mar 2009

Sustainable America Is Achievable In Our Lifetime, John Dernbach

John C. Dernbach

No abstract provided.


Smart Use Of Resources Makes Good Economic Sense, John Dernbach Mar 2009

Smart Use Of Resources Makes Good Economic Sense, John Dernbach

John C. Dernbach

No abstract provided.


Deciphering The Chemical Soup: Using Public Nuisance To Compel Chemical Testing, Albert C. Lin Feb 2009

Deciphering The Chemical Soup: Using Public Nuisance To Compel Chemical Testing, Albert C. Lin

Albert C Lin

The problem of toxic ignorance plagues modern society. On a daily basis, each of us is exposed to hundreds of chemicals, the vast majority of which have been subject to little or no testing to determine whether they are toxic to humans or the environment. Many of these chemicals may turn out to be harmless. Some, however, may cause cancer, reproductive defects, and other harms. In toto, chemicals are believed to be responsible for tens of thousands of deaths per year. The systematic failure of manufacturers and distributors to test chemical substances is a rational response to marketplace incentives, tort …


Environmental Law, Joseph Sax Dec 2008

Environmental Law, Joseph Sax

Joseph L. Sax

No abstract provided.


Climate Change Litigation – Power Point Slides, Chapter Three, David Hodas, Kenneth Kristl, James May Dec 2008

Climate Change Litigation – Power Point Slides, Chapter Three, David Hodas, Kenneth Kristl, James May

David R. Hodas

No abstract provided.


Book Review (Reviewing Kenneth P. Murchison, The Snail Darter Case: Tva Versus The Endangered Species Act, 2007), John Dernbach Dec 2008

Book Review (Reviewing Kenneth P. Murchison, The Snail Darter Case: Tva Versus The Endangered Species Act, 2007), John Dernbach

John C. Dernbach

No abstract provided.


Vindicating Fundamental Environmental Rights: Judicial Acceptance Of Constitutionally Entrenched Environmental Rights, James May, Erin Daly Dec 2008

Vindicating Fundamental Environmental Rights: Judicial Acceptance Of Constitutionally Entrenched Environmental Rights, James May, Erin Daly

Erin Daly

This article examines the extent to which constitutionally embedded fundamental environmental rights have met the promise of ensuring a right to an adequate environment. It explains these results and suggests ways to neutralize judicial resistance to these emerging constitutional rights. In Part II we explain the prevalence of constitutionally entrenched rights to a quality environment. In Part III, we provide examples of the extent to which courts have enforced these provisions. In Part IV, we examine institutional and structural factors, conceptual disjunctions, and pragmatic considerations that help to explain judicial receptivity to constitutionally entrenched environmental rights. And in Part V …