X

NOTIFY ME

Enter your email address to receive notifications about new posts & articles in your inbox.
X
Home    |   Print Edition   |   Issue 2

Volume 46 (2019) - Issue 2

A Narrative Understanding of the National Environmental Policy Act

The National Environmental Policy Act requires federal agencies to engage in a public participation process when making decisions that affect the environment. The technical complexity of the NEPA public participation process blocks the public from participating in an agency’s decision-making process, and agencies often struggle to take public comments seriously while creating Environmental Impact Statements.

Apr 01, 2020
Jarrod Ingles

Implications Beyond Culverts: The Challenges Tribes Will Face Extending United States v. Washington to Other Habitat-Depleting Policies

This past June 2018, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed a Ninth Circuit decision interpreting the treaties of twenty-one tribes in western Washington to include a right to not have salmon habitat so depleted that it prevented significant salmon numbers from reaching the tribes’ accustomed fishing grounds. The basis of this litigation was Washington State’s culverts, structures built to allow roads to cross over streams.

Apr 01, 2020
Shelby Culver

NEPA: A Tool for Tribes Challenging Nuclear Regulatory Commission Licensed Uranium Extraction Projects

Native American tribes have an extensive history of resisting uranium extraction on and near their reservations. Over the years, tribes have employed a myriad of approaches to combat efforts to license new uranium extraction projects. These efforts include pursuing extraction bans, advancing human rights violation arguments, and intervening on project licensing proceedings before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Apr 01, 2020
Cheyenne Overall

County of San Mateo v. Chevron & City of Oakland v. BP: Are State Nuisance Claims for Climate-Change Damage Removable?

In the last few years, coastal municipalities and communities throughout the United States have filed several near-identical state common law nuisance claims against major oil companies for contributing to climate change through greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. While the claims raise numerous interesting and difficult questions, one major issue is whether such state common law claims belong in federal or state court.

Apr 01, 2020
Calen Bennett