Open Controls Close Controls

Combatting Lake Invaders: A Proposal for Ballast Water Standards to Save the Great Lakes from Invasive Species

Julie Rose

March 29th 2020

Since 1972, the Clean Water Act has been a powerful tool for regulating waterborne pollutants. Despite the success of the Clean Water Act in mitigating water pollution, unforeseen challenges arise when regulators use the Clean Water Act to regulate nonconventional pollutants, including invasive species. Invasive species continue to wreak havoc ...

Vindicating Public Environmental Interest: Defining the Role of Environmental Public Interest Litigation in China

Julie Rose

March 29th 2020

Chinese environmental public interest litigation has assumed increasing attention and significance in recent years. By simply granting standing to public authorities and environmental groups to challenge “acts of polluting or damaging the environment that have harmed the public interest,” the amended Civil Procedure Law of 2012 and Environmental Protection Law ...

Carbon Dioxide Removal after Paris

Julie Rose

March 29th 2020

Notwithstanding adoption of the Paris Agreement on climate change, mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions appears unlikely to achieve the stated goal of limiting the mean global temperature increase to 2°C. Under many scenarios, achieving this goal would require not only vigorous mitigation efforts, but also the deployment of carbon dioxide ...

Reform Incentives, Transform the Grid: Making Good on Hawai’i’s Renewable Energy Ambitions

Julie Rose

March 29th 2020

In 2008, Hawai‘i’s electric utilities and state government committed to transforming Hawai‘i into a world leader in the adoption of renewable energy. The characteristics of Hawai‘i’s electricity system—including high imported fossil fuel costs—appeared to make this project more technically feasible, economically attractive, and politically popular in Hawai‘i than in any ...

Defining the Role of Agriculture in Agricultural Conservation Easements

Julie Rose

March 29th 2020

Farmland preservation has become an important pursuit for those seeking to protect the working landscape. One of the most common approaches for securing this protection is through the targeted use of agricultural conservation easements, typically perpetual land use agreements designed to limit incompatible activities in order to preserve future agricultural ...

Corporate Sustainability Disclosures in American Case Law: Purposeful or Mere “Puffery”?

Julie Rose

March 27th 2020

Recent years have shown an uptick in lawsuits involving sustainability disclosures, or lack thereof, by companies. In the United States, litigation involving sustainability disclosures has primarily arisen in two statutory contexts: securities fraud (federal law) and consumer protection or consumer fraud (state and federal law). Essentially, these cases involve allegations ...

The Federal Government Has an Implied Moral Constitutional Duty to Protect Individuals from Harm Due to Climate Change: Throwing Spaghetti against the Wall to See What Sticks

Julie Rose

March 27th 2020

The continuing failure of the federal government to respond to the growing threat of climate change, despite affirmative duties to do so, creates a governance vacuum that the Constitution might help fill, if such a responsibility could be found within the document. This Article explores textual and non-textual constitutional support ...

Can You Hear the Rivers Sing? Legal Personhood, Ontology, and the Nitty-Gritty of Governance

Julie Rose

March 27th 2020

In 2017, multiple claims and declarations from around the legal world appeared to signal a tipping point in the global acceptance of a new and evolving legal status for nature. Whether it was litigation in the United States, India, and Colombia, or legislation emanating from New Zealand and Australia, the ...

The Faux Scholarship Foundation of the Regulatory Rollback Movement

Julie Rose

March 27th 2020

With the full participation and consent of Congress, President Trump has embarked upon a radical project to freeze and roll back federal regulations that protect public health, safety, the environment, and the economy. The principal justification for this project, publicly announced by both Congress and President Trump, is the claim ...

Whose Lands? Which Public? The Shape of Public-Lands Law and Trump’s National Monument Proclamations

Julie Rose

March 27th 2020

President Trump issued a proclamation in December 2017 purporting to remove two million acres in southern Utah from national monument status, radically shrinking the Grand-Staircase Escalante National Monument and splitting the Bears Ears National Monument into two residual protected areas. Whether the President has the power to revise or revoke ...

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Stay up to date about upcoming events and exciting news about our current members.