AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
James J. Vinch THE UNEXPECTED IMPLICATIONS OF SACKETT v. EPA ON WATER QUANTITY ALLOCATIONS IN THE ARID WEST 52 Ecology Law Quarterly 193 (2025) Water moves over the earth according to the hydrologic cycle and can be best understood as an integrated system. However, the law often artificially segregates the hydrologic cycle into its component parts for regulatory purposes. The Clean Water Act is an example of a statute which separates water quality--which is regulated jointly by the federal... 2025
Sara K. Van Norman THE WAY BACK HOME: THE INDIAN LAND TENURE FOUNDATION'S SURVEY OF TRIBAL LAND-BACK PROJECTS ACROSS THE UNITED STATES 53 Urban Lawyer 7 (January, 2025) There are many analyses of the violent and centuries-long American project to take Indian lands from tribes. There are also concerted and high-profile federal initiatives, driven by tribal partnership, lobbying, and litigation, that have arisen over the past several decades that serve to facilitate consolidation and reacquisition of tribal lands.... 2025
Allan T. Marks THINK GLOBALLY AND ACT LOCALLY: COLLABORATION ACROSS BORDERS TO ADDRESS CLIMATE CHANGE 53 Denver Journal of International Law and Policy 303 (Spring, 2025) Climate change is a global challenge. International cooperation is essential yet insufficient. This tension is evident in negotiations of international climate agreements and at global climate conferences. In this context, it is worth asking why international law has so far failed sufficiently to address the global challenge of climate change and... 2025
Will Miller THIS LAND IS OUR LAND: ADDRESSING FOREIGN OWNERSHIP OF AGRICULTURAL LAND IN THE UNITED STATES 17 Kentucky Journal of Equine, Agriculture, and Natural Resources Law 83 (2024-2025) The United States is quietly divesting itself of one of its most useful and non-renewable resources: agricultural land. Foreign holdings of agricultural land in the United States (interests in agricultural land held by foreign investors) have increased considerably throughout the twenty-first century. Foreign persons owned 15.3 million acres of... 2025
Daniel A. Farber TOWARD A FUTURE-FACING CLIMATE POLICY: SHIFTING THE FOCUS FROM EMISSION REGULATION TO THE ENERGY TRANSITION 50 Columbia Journal of Environmental Law 1 (2025) This Article provides a systems analysis of climate change policy that links together subsystems relating to innovation, energy economics, interest group politics, and government regulation. It is easy but misleading to equate climate policy with emissions regulation. That is too narrow a frame. We urgently need a new energy system because of... 2025
Susan Lea Smith , Darlene Sanderson TRANSFORMING WATER: THE EMERGING PARADIGM OF WATER JUSTICE ETHICS 55 Environmental Law 303 (Spring, 2025) This Essay calls for a critical transformation in humanity's relationship with water, shifting away from the dominant western paradigm of sustainable integrated water resources management (IWRM) to water justice ethics, a life-affirming ethical relationship with water. The sustainable IWRM paradigm is superior to earlier twentieth century versions... 2025
Ivy K. Chase TRIBAL AUTHORITY TO ISSUE SEARCH WARRANTS TO NON-TRIBAL ENTITIES OR ON NON-INDIAN LAND WITHIN RESERVATION BOUNDARIES 49 American Indian Law Review 15 (2025) At a U.S. Senate hearing for the Committee on Indian Affairs in 2010, Sen. Jon Tester said, We have had many, many hearings in this Committee about public safety and the crime rate and what is going on in Indian Country. All of it is very distressing. Communities within Indian Country face some of the most dangerous living conditions in the... 2025
Sydney Simmons TURNING UP THE HEAT: DISABILITY, RACE, AND ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE IN THE SOUTH 19 Southern Journal of Policy and Justice 59 (May, 2025) C1-2Contents Contents 1 TURNING UP THE HEAT: DISABILITY, RACE, AND ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE IN THE SOUTH 3 ABSTRACT 3 INTRODUCTION 3 BACKGROUND 5 A. HISTORICAL CONTEXT: REDLINING AND ENVIRONMENTAL INJUSTICE 5 B. WHY DISABLED BLACK COMMUNITY ARE ESPECIALLY VULNERABLE 9 C. LEGAL CONTEXT FOR VULNERABILITY 10 ANALYSIS 20 A. THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK 20 B.... 2025
Jordann Krouse UNDER THE UMBRELLA OF WATER LAW: WHY RAINWATER HARVESTING SHOULD CONSTITUTE A VALID WATER RIGHT 100 Washington Law Review 545 (June, 2025) Abstract: Rain is a major source of water. It provides for our greatest needs, such as feeding our gardens, crops, rivers, and lakes. As global climate change continues to unfold, the impacts of water availability and water pollution simultaneously grow more urgent. Water rights are a mechanism in the United States' legal system to allocate,... 2025
Dr. Cynthia Swann UNEQUAL GROUND: RURAL AMERICA'S LEGACY OF ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM AND EXPLOITATION 51 Human Rights 49 (October, 2025) Environmental justice--the principle that all communities deserve equal protection from environmental harm regardless of race, income, or geography-- has too often been framed through an urban lens. Across America, from Appalachia and the Southeast to industrial and agricultural heartlands, and into the Pacific and Northern territories, rural... 2025
Frank Pommersheim , Bryce Drapeaux UNITED STATES v. SIOUX NATION OF INDIANS REVISITED: JUSTICE, REPAIR, AND LAND RETURN 70 South Dakota Law Review 176 (2025) The amazing legal journey of this case begins in 1923 and ends with a Sioux Nation of Indians victory in the Supreme Court in 1980. Before reaching the Supreme Court, the case was litigated four different times before the Court of Claims because of the ineffective assistance of counsel and the necessity of a congressional statute to clear away... 2025
Nina-Simone Edwards UNVEILING THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF LARGE LANGUAGE MODELS ON INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES: A CALL FOR ACTION AND LIABILITY 38 Tulane Environmental Law Journal 1 (Winter, 2025) Large Language Models (LLMs) have rapidly gained popularity for their language generation and comprehension capabilities, promising increased efficiency in various sectors. However, while celebrated for their transformative potential, LLMs exacerbate current climate issues. This Article highlights the detrimental environmental footprint of LLMs,... 2025
John P. LaVelle USES AND ABUSES OF JOHNSON v. M'INTOSH IN NATIVE AMERICAN LAND RIGHTS CASES: INVESTIGATIVE INSIGHTS FROM THE INDIAN LAW JUSTICE FILES 86 Montana Law Review 281 (Summer, 2025) The 200th anniversary of the foundational Indian law decision Johnson v. M'Intosh has come and gone, with many scholars contributing criticism and commentary. The dominant focus has been the case's notorious embrace of the so-called doctrine of discovery, an odious theory for rationalizing European nations' claims of superior rights to lands... 2025
Vanessa Casado Pérez WATER FLOWING DOWN WALL STREET 109 Minnesota Law Review 2749 (June, 2025) Water scarcity is a perennial problem with dire consequences for the United States and governments around the world. A lack of adequate water resources is a systematic cause of environmental harm, economic damage, and societal division. Climate change has exacerbated these problems making water even more valuable and essential. Financial actors... 2025
Robert Haskell “Bo” Abrams WATER GOVERNANCE AND WATER FUTURES IN THE UNITED STATES AND AUSTRALIA 65 Natural Resources Journal 193 (Summer, 2025) The world's hydroclimate has become more extreme in the last several decades--a phenomenon described in technical terms as the loss of stationarity. Focusing particularly on the drought-induced stresses, this Article examines water governance in the American West and Australia seeking aspects in the laws, institutions, and approaches of each nation... 2025
Wesley James Furlong , Lori E. Blumenthal WATER KNOWS NO BOUNDARIES: TRIBAL JURISDICTION OVER NON-INDIANS' OFF-RESERVATION CONDUCT THAT THREATENS ON-RESERVATION TRIBAL WATER RESOURCES 48 Public Land & Resources Law Review 109 (2025) It is also axiomatic that the quality of the natural environment on the Reservation impacts directly the health and welfare of the Tribes and the[ir] economic security. Pollution in the ground, air and water knows no boundaries and impacts Tribal, fee and allotted lands on the Reservation. It is extremely difficult to separate the effects of air... 2025
Victoria Sutton WE CAN PROTECT THE "WATERS OF THE UNITED STATES" AS LONG AS THEY STAY OUT OF THE HYDROLOGICAL CYCLE 61 Idaho Law Review 89 (2025) The water cycle, including its oceans, surface water, wetlands, water vapor, clouds and groundwater, has resulted in a patchwork of statutes and regulations that fail to comprehensively protect the waters of the United States. This is not a simple fix, and requires Congressional positivism rather than decades of relying on the judicial branch... 2025
Wyatt G. Sassman WHAT'S LEFT OF ENVIRONMENTAL DEMOCRACY? 49 Harvard Environmental Law Review 461 (2025) The foundations of environmental democracy--the laws and practices that give people a say in decisions that affect their environment--are crumbling. The permitting reform debate and pressures to build climate infrastructure have undermined confidence in the public's role in environmental policy, resulting in widespread calls to rethink the basic... 2025
Martin A. McCrory , Phoebe Jean-Pierre , Stephanie M.H. Moore , Paul Levy , Elise Boruvka WHAT'S THE GUY'S NAME ON SECOND . I DON'T KNOW: CERCLA, ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, ENVIRONMENTAL LIABILITY, AND GUAM 31 Texas Journal on Civil Liberties & Civil Rights 68 (Fall, 2025) It really boils down to this: that all life is interrelated. We are all caught in an inescapable network of mutuality . The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) was a hastily drafted statute meant to quell the growing public outcry after the discovery of massive amounts of hazardous substances located... 2025
Lana Aguon WHEN SMALL NATIONS LEAD: THE PACIFIC'S CLIMATE CASE TO THE WORLD'S HIGHEST COURT 12/1/2025 Georgetown Environmental Law Review Online 1 (1-Dec-25) A landmark ICJ advisory opinion, driven by Pacific leadership, defines states' legal duties to address climate change and affirms the existential stakes for small island nations. Across the Pacific, the climate crisis is not a distant threat - it is a daily reality. Rising seas swallow ancestral shorelines, saltwater intrusion destroys crops and... 2025
Gary D. Libecap , Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Santa Barbara and National Bureau of Economic Research, USA WHERE'S COASE? TRANSACTION COSTS REDUCTION OR RENT-SEEKING IN DETERMINING US ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES 84 International Review of Law & Economics 1 (December, 2025) JEL classifications: No. K11 K32 N42 N5 N52 N92 Q52 Q53 Q57 Q58 Keywords: Williamson Coase Institutional Economics Law and Economics Organization Transaction Cost Management Environmental Economics Rent-Seeking In 1960, Ronald Coase offered a decentralized bargaining framework for reducing transaction costs in externality mitigation. Subsequent US... 2025
Adi Gal WHO OWNS CLIMATE LITIGATION AWARDS? 52 Ecology Law Quarterly 59 (2025) Since 2017, U.S. states, municipalities, tribes, and cities have sought billions of dollars in damages from oil and gas companies for the environmental harm they have caused by their fossil fuel activities. This subnational government-led litigation campaign seeking to hold fossil fuel companies accountable is a meaningful step in the fight against... 2025
Michael Lewyn ZONING AND LAND USE PLANNING 53 Real Estate Law Journal 347 (Spring, 2025) A restrictive covenant is an agreement between two parties to 1) restrict the use of one or both parties' land, 2) require one or both parties to perform an act on their land, or 3) require one or both parties to pay money for the upkeep of facilities on their land. Courts have traditionally divided enforcement of such covenants into two theories... 2025
Michael J. Myers , Turner Smith "SPECIAL SOLICITUDE" OR "SPECIAL HOSTILITY?" WHERE STATE STANDING IN ENVIRONMENTAL LITIGATION STANDS 17 YEARS AFTER MASSACHUSETTS v. EPA 42 UCLA Journal of Environmental Law & Policy 207 (2024) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 209 II. The Evolution of State Standing in Massachusetts v. EPA. 211 A. Different Theories of State Standing. 211 B. State Standing in Massachusetts v. EPA. 213 III. The Evolution of State Standing Since Massachusetts v. EPA. 220 A. Standing Based on Proprietary and Pocketbook Injuries Since Massachusetts. 221... 2024
Audra Locicero A CASE FOR TRIBAL CO-MANAGEMENT OF FEDERAL PUBLIC LANDS 53 Stetson Law Review 543 (Spring, 2024) We are the land. To the best of my understanding, that is the fundamental idea embedded in Native American life and culture in the Southwest. More than remembered, the Earth is the mind of the people as we are the mind of the Earth .. It is not a means of survival .. It is rather part of our being, dynamic, significant, real. Virtually every person... 2024
K. Ashley Eshleman A COMPARATIVE LOOK: APPLYING VERMONT'S ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE ACT IN TENNESSEE 25 Vermont Journal of Environmental Law 155 (Winter, 2024) EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. 155 INTRODUCTION. 156 I. FEDERAL ACTIONS TOWARDS Environmental justice. 158 II. BACKGROUND ON VERMONT'S Environmental justice ACT. 160 III. BACKGROUND ON TENNESSEE. 163 IV. HOW THE BILL WOULD WORK IN TENNESSEE. 167 CONCLUSION. 172 2024
Isaac Bloch A GREEN ENERGY WATERSHED: WATER LITIGATION, ELECTRIC BATTERIES, AND AGENCY OVERSIGHT OF LITHIUM MINING 27 University of Denver Water Law Review 1 (Spring, 2024) I. INTRODUCTION: LITHIUM AT THE WATER-ENERGY NEXUS. 2 II. THE WATER LITIGATION RISKS OF TRADITIONAL LITHIUM MINING. 5 A. State Prior Appropriations Law in Contemporary Western Mining Operations. 5 B. Federal Challenges to Water Allocation under NEPA. 7 III. WATERSHED MANAGEMENT AT THE SALTON SEA. 13 A. Salton Sea Stakeholders. 14 B. Precious Metals... 2024
Muriel Hague A HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO CARBON CAPTURE AND SEQUESTRATION REGULATION IN TEXAS AND BEYOND 61 Houston Law Review 827 (Symposium 2024) Carbon capture and sequestration (CCS), a decades-old concept, has recently garnered significant support and investment as a leading method for decarbonizing the atmosphere. However, regulation of CCS technology lags behind its rapid development. In most cases, primary regulatory control belongs to the Environmental Protection Agency, though state... 2024
Clifford J. Villa A NEW DAY FOR ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AT THE U.S. EPA 54 University of Memphis Law Review 867 (Summer, 2024) On February 16, 2024, Cliff Villa, the Environmental Protection Agency Office of Land and Emergency Management Deputy Assistant Administrator presented at The University of Memphis Law Review Volume 54 Annual Symposium. Here, he spoke to students, lawyers, activists, and community members about environmental justice at the EPA. Our symposium was... 2024
Max Clayton A NEW MOMENT FOR INDIAN WATER RIGHTS SETTLEMENTS 64 Natural Resources Journal 33 (Winter, 2024) Indian water rights settlements have been the primary mechanism to resolve water conflicts between tribal governments and state, municipal, and non-governmental parties. Although scholars have for decades roundly criticized settlements for their many shortcomings, this paper suggests that a combination of forces has altered the conditions for... 2024
James Cavallaro , Silvia Serrano Guzmán , Jessica Tueller A NEW PATH FORWARD? HOW ATTENTION TO ECONOMIC, SOCIAL, CULTURAL, AND ENVIRONMENTAL RIGHTS COULD INCREASE U.S. INDIGENOUS AND AFRICAN-AMERICAN CIVIL SOCIETY ENGAGEMENT WITH THE INTER-AMERICAN HUMAN RIGHTS SYSTEM 28 UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs 39 (Fall, 2024) This Article contends that the evolving approach of the inter-American human rights system toward the human rights of Indigenous peoples and persons of African descent, including their economic, social, cultural, and environmental rights, presents a key opportunity for U.S. civil society actors to expand beyond the dominant framework of civil... 2024
Natalie Smith A PATH TO CLIMATE ASYLUM UNDER U.S. LAW 124 Columbia Law Review 1779 (October, 2024) Clarifying the extent to which existing legal regimes afford protection to climate migrants must be part of an effective and coordinated response to climate change. This Note argues that climate refugees, a group which it narrowly defines as those who meet the requirements of the 1951 Refugee Convention because they have experienced climate... 2024
Charisa Smith A POST-DOBBS FUTURE: BAILING WATER DOWNSTREAM TO CENTER DEMOCRACY'S CHILDREN 54 Seton Hall Law Review 747 (2024) The reversal of Roe v. Wade by Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization not only imperils vital reproductive freedom across the United States but also illuminates the countless ways that childhood precarity will be exacerbated downstream now that forced births are sanctioned by the state. While an individual's reasons for exercising abortion... 2024
Maxwell S. Granger ABORTION IN THE ENCLAVES: FEDERAL LEGISLATIVE JURISDICTION AND ITS PRACTICAL CHALLENGES FOR ABORTION CLINICS ON FEDERAL LAND 54 Golden Gate University Law Review 75 (May, 2024) Introduction. 76 I. Federal Legislative Jurisdiction: Primer & Practicalities. 81 A. What is Federal Legislative Jurisdiction?. 81 1. Overview. 81 2. Levels of Jurisdiction. 83 3. Federal Acquisition of Jurisdiction. 84 4. Federal Acceptance of Jurisdiction. 85 5. Retrocession. 86 6. Rejection of the State Within a State Theory. 86 B.... 2024
Alejandro E. Camacho , Elizabeth Kronk Warner , Jason McLachlan , Nathan Kroeze ADAPTING CONSERVATION GOVERNANCE UNDER CLIMATE CHANGE: LESSONS FROM INDIAN COUNTRY 110 Virginia Law Review 1549 (November, 2024) Anthropogenic climate change is increasingly causing disruptions to ecological communities upon which Natives have relied for millennia. These disruptions raise existential threats not only to ecosystems but to Native communities. Yet no analysis has carefully explored how climate change is affecting the governance of tribal ecological lands. This... 2024
Elena Mak ADDRESSING SPACE TOURISM'S ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS: MARINE ENVIRONMENT REGULATIONS AS A BASIS FOR REGULATING ORBITAL SPACE DEBRIS 89 Journal of Air Law and Commerce 477 (Summer, 2024) YesWith the success of private suborbital space flight, the space industry is now facing unprecedented growth as billionaires strive to accomplish the task of sending astrotourists into space. However, given the novelty of this objective, the current domestic and international legal regimes governing outer space and space travel are both confusing and... 2024
Haley Todd Newsome ADVANCING TORT LAW FOR CLIMATE DISPLACEMENT COMPENSATION 14 Arizona Journal of Environmental Law & Policy 48 (Summer, 2024) Climate change has already displaced people from their homes and is predicted to displace millions more in the coming decades. Involuntary climate-induced migration causes loss and damage before, during, and after the displacement. In this Note, I argue that the climate displaced should seek tort compensation from fossil fuel companies for this... 2024
Vanessa Springer AFFORDABLE HOUSING IN HEALTHY COMMUNITIES: INTEGRATING ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE INTO THE APPLICATION CRITERIA FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING TAX CREDITS IN NEW MEXICO 54 New Mexico Law Review 623 (Summer, 2024) In Bernalillo County, New Mexico, communities of color and people living below the poverty line are more likely to live in areas with high exposure to pollution and associated health risks. Similar trends are echoed throughout the country. These data trends and experiences form the basis for the environmental justice movement, or the movement for a... 2024
Elias Marques de Medeiros Neto, Fernando Eduardo Serec AGRIBUSINESS AND INDIGENOUS LANDS THE IMPORTANCE OF THE MULTI-DOOR CONFLICT RESOLUTION SYSTEM 30 Dispute Resolution Magazine 21 (January, 2024) Brazilian agribusiness is a pillar of the national economy. This is evident when looking at the numbers, which demonstrate the sector's strength in Brazil and around the world. It is estimated that agribusiness will constitute around 24% of the Brazilian GDP in 2023, nearly one quarter of the country's economy. This is due, in part, to record grain... 2024
Baine P. Kerr ALL NECESSARY MEASURES: CLIMATE LAW FOR INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING 64 Virginia Journal of International Law 523 (Spring, 2024) YesInternational shipping is one of the largest sources of climate pollution. The conventional view is that, despite some ambiguities in the climate treaties, international law only requires states to implement global rules adopted by the International Maritime Organization. This overlooks the important and timely question of whether other sources of... 2024
Oday Salim ARE RACE-BASED ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE POLICIES SAFE? 50 Human Rights 40 (October, 2024) In recent years, we have seen a significant volume of federal and state environmental justice policy with attorneys general developing enforcement plans focused on environmental justice. Environmental and conservation agencies have adopted limited English proficiency (LEP) plans to ensure that LEP individuals are not left out of decision-making... 2024
Jennifer Horkovich ARIZONA v. NAVAJO NATION AND SYSTEMIC FAILURES IN THE TRIBAL WATER ALLOCATION SCHEME 35 Fordham Environmental Law Review 30 (Spring, 2024) When the United States Supreme Court's decision in Arizona v. Navajo Nation was published in June 2023, Indian Country was hardly surprised with the Court's ruling. There, the Court found that the United States had no affirmative duty to affirmatively protect the Navajo Nation's water rights under the 1868 Treaty. The Court was clear: the treaty is... 2024
Monica Visalam Iyer, Kerilyn Schewel ARTICULATING AND CLAIMING THE RIGHT TO STAY IN THE CONTEXT OF CLIMATE CHANGE 38 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 207 (Winter, 2024) Climate-related displacement is a topic of increasing concern in both academic research and the political, social, and humanitarian spheres. As many seek to develop legal regimes that will allow those living in the most climate-affected areas to move with dignity, individuals and communities living in these countries, regions, and localities are... 2024
Alexandra Dapolito Dunn AT THE INTERSECTION OF ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AND SUSTAINABILITY LIES A MORE EQUITABLE, HEALTHY FUTURE FOR U.S. COMMUNITIES 92 UMKC Law Review 773 (Summer, 2024) When major societal movements come together, the result is progress, learning, and significant change. The movements at focus in this Article are first, environmental justice, which grew out of the civil rights movement in the late 1960s and which is, at this moment, at its peak of influence over federal, state, and local policy. Second, the... 2024
Katrina Fischer Kuh AVOIDING PERFORMATIVE CLIMATE JUSTICE 54 Environmental Law Reporter (ELI) 10230 (March, 2024) Today's climate impacts and those on the horizon increasingly infuse mitigation and adaptation efforts with urgency, causing policymakers to contemplate or issue formal declarations of a climate emergency and to streamline review processes to aid rapid development of mitigation and adaptation infrastructure and technology. Yet, this urgency and... 2024
Jasmine N. Cooper BATTLE OF THE LANDS: THE CREATION OF LAND GRANT INSTITUTIONS AND HBCUS--FOSTERING A STILL SEPARATE AND STILL UNEQUAL HIGHER EDUCATION SYSTEM 30 Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice 247 (Spring, 2024) In HBCU culture, the Battle of the Bands is a competition between school marching bands to determine the best of the best. It is a cultural celebration that symbolizes friendly competition and showcases students' pride in their school. Unfortunately, since their inception, Historically Black Colleges, and Universities (HBCUs) have been battling... 2024
Megan Resener Garofalo BATTLING ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM IN CANCER ALLEY: A LEGISLATIVE APPROACH 52 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 196 (Spring, 2024) Keywords: Environmental, Racism, Cancer, Alley, Petrochemical Abstract: This Paper argues that to protect at-risk communities--and all Americans--from the deadly effects of environmental racism, Congress must pass the Environmental justice for All Act. The Act is intended to restore, reaffirm, and reconcile environmental justice and civil rights.... 2024
Helen H. Kang BEARING WITNESS TO ENVIRONMENTAL INJUSTICE: THE PATH FORWARD 54 Environmental Law 315 (Spring, 2024) I. Introduction. 315 II. Geography Is Destiny. 317 III. Pollution Burdens. 320 IV. Demographic Shift. 322 V. What Now?. 324 2024
Jennifer S. Bard BREAKING DOCTRINAL SILOS BETWEEN ENVIRONMENTAL LAW, DISABILITY LAW, AND TORTS TO STOP THE SPREAD OF INFECTIOUS DISEASE THROUGH CONTAMINATED INDOOR AIR 39 Journal of Environmental Law & Litigation 163 (2024) Acknowledgments. 166 Introduction and Statement of the Problem. 167 I. Getting to Ventilation: How Scientific Opinion on the Spread of Airborne Disease Changed. 171 A. The COVID-19 Pandemic as an Engine for Scientific Discovery. 174 B. Setting the Scene for Scientific Discovery: The Arrival of SARS-CoV-2. 180 C. What Changed the Received... 2024
Sara A. Colangelo BRIDGING SILOS: ENVIRONMENTAL AND REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE IN THE CLIMATE CRISIS 112 California Law Review 1255 (August, 2024) The climate crisis is a perilous yet underexamined example of the intersection of environmental injustice and reproductive injustice. The physical manifestations of the climate crisis affect key elements of reproductive justice: women's rights to have children, to not have children, and to parent children in healthy, sustainable communities. Reams... 2024
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