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Full-Text Articles in Law

Qui Tam Actions Under The 1899 Refuse Act: Possibility Of Individual Legal Action To Prevent Water Pollution, Charles N. Drennan Nov 1971

Qui Tam Actions Under The 1899 Refuse Act: Possibility Of Individual Legal Action To Prevent Water Pollution, Charles N. Drennan

Missouri Law Review

During the decade of the 1960's a host of environmental problems were brought to the attention of the American public, including overpopulation, poisoning from pesticides, air pollution, and water pollution. As a result, concerned individuals joined to form conservation dubs and other groups in an attempt to find methods of combating the various problems. One of the methods proposed in the water pollution area arose from certain provisions in an 1899 statute which has now come to be known as the 1899 Refuse Act. Briefly stated, the Act prohibits the discharge of any refuse matter into navigable water without first …


Administering State Water Resources: The Need For Long-Range Planning, Richard C. Ausness, Frank E. Maloney Sep 1971

Administering State Water Resources: The Need For Long-Range Planning, Richard C. Ausness, Frank E. Maloney

Law Faculty Scholarly Articles

Drastically increased demands upon the nation's water resources are predicted in the coming years as a result of population growth, increased per capita use of water, and the progressive concentration of the population in urban areas.

One solution to the water shortage problem is to obtain water from new sources. The boldest and most ambitious proposal is the North American Water and Power Alliance (NAWAPA). This project would result in the damming of various rivers in Alaska and the Canadian Yukon, and transporting the waters of these rivers into a largely man-made five hundred mile long reservoir along the Rocky …


Standing, Ripeness And Bureaucratic Inertia - Environmental Defense Fund V. Hardin Jan 1971

Standing, Ripeness And Bureaucratic Inertia - Environmental Defense Fund V. Hardin

Maryland Law Review

No abstract provided.


International Environmental Damage Control: Some Proposals For The Second Best Of All Possible Worlds, Stephen J. Vasek Jr. Jan 1971

International Environmental Damage Control: Some Proposals For The Second Best Of All Possible Worlds, Stephen J. Vasek Jr.

Law Faculty Scholarly Articles

Recent meetings of international law experts have produced considerable debate over the type of international regime necessary to effectively control pollution. Divergent views expressed range from the "survival approach" of Professor Falk to the "grocery-list approach" of Christian Herter Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of State for Environment. The "grocery-list approach" is an operational approach which involves doing what can be done by the use of available means including discussion to define common interests, international agreements based on those shared interests, unilateral action where appropriate and increased use of the UN for a variety of purposes such as environment …


Environmental Law: New Legal Concepts In The Antipollution Fight , Patrick E. Murphy Jan 1971

Environmental Law: New Legal Concepts In The Antipollution Fight , Patrick E. Murphy

Missouri Law Review

Until quite recently it has been the accepted view that one of man's chief functions was to control and to exploit his environment. Only within the last year have most Americans begun to realize that we do not possess an inexhaustible supply of natural resources; that in fact the quality of man's life is threatened and perhaps his very existence. This public concern for the quality of our environment is beginning to be felt in the courtroom. Private citizens have attempted to preserve the livability of this country by bringing legal action against the federal government, the states, and private …


Coastal Zoning, James H. Ewalt, Robert H. Deaderick Jan 1971

Coastal Zoning, James H. Ewalt, Robert H. Deaderick

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

In today's atmosphere of environmental awareness, protection of the coastal wetlands seems appropriate for many reasons. The wetlands include much of the most aesthetically pleasing areas in the United States, while also being a source of recreation and enjoyment. Man has long had an economic interest in the valuable natural resources, minerals and fish which the wetlands yield. The result is a conglomerate of conflicting demands upon the wetlands. The situation begs for definition and control of these interests so that the full potential of the coast can be realized.

Zoning has often been suggested as a means to protect …