AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
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  
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  
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  
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  
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  
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  
Shelley Ross Saxer BUILDING CLIMATE RESILIENCE WITH LOCAL TOOLS 58 Georgia Law Review 1663 (10-Jun-24) The first Earth Day on April 22, 1970, celebrated the grassroots environmental movement that began in the '60s and early '70s and ushered in the creation of a new legal framework for controlling pollution and addressing environmental concerns in the United States. However, more than fifty years later, some experts fear that the environmental... 2024  
Alexandra M. George CAN WE REALLY BE THE CHANGE WE WISH TO SEE? THE INHERENT LIMITATIONS OF CITIZEN SUITS IN REMEDYING ENVIRONMENTAL INJUSTICE UNDER THE CLEAN AIR ACT 35 Villanova Environmental Law Journal 153 (2024) If you live in Philadelphia County, the air you breathe may put your health at risk. Where a person lives plays a crucial role in shaping their overall health outcomes and life expectancy. An individual's zip code alone can determine up to sixty percent of their health. In the United States, significant racial disparities exist among communities... 2024  
Daniel Cornelius, Steph Tai CAN WE SAVE OUR FOODWAYS? THE INFLATION REDUCTION ACT, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND FOOD JUSTICE 133 Yale Law Journal Forum 1053 (17-Apr-24) abstract. This Essay examines USDA programs supported by the Inflation Reduction Act and its approach toward addressing climate change and historical funding inequities for Indigenous and Black Farmers. It also argues for how the next Farm Bill can expand upon these efforts to further address inequities and promote climate resilience. Farmers,... 2024  
Kate Jastram CLIMATE CHANGE AND CROSS-BORDER DISPLACEMENT: WHAT THE COURTS, THE ADMINISTRATION, AND CONGRESS CAN DO TO IMPROVE OPTIONS FOR THE UNITED STATES 56 Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law 309 (Spring, 2024) Introduction. 309 Part I. 312 A. Maximizing the Potential of the Refugee Convention and Protocol. 312 B. Adopting the Cartagena Declaration Definition to Address Climate Displacement. 319 C. Expanding Complementary Protection by Accepting Non-Refoulement Obligations Under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. 322 Part II. 326 A.... 2024  
Vera Solovyeva CLIMATE CHANGE IN ARCTIC AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLES. CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS 29 Ocean and Coastal Law Journal 317 (January, 2024) Abstract I. Global Climate Change in the Arctic II. Climate Change Impacts on Indigenous Peoples A. Medical Impacts B. Socio-economic Impacts C. Socio-cultural Impacts III. Importance of Indigenous Knowledge and Local Knowledge in Climate Change Adaptation IV. Indigenous Peoples Matters of Definition in the Russian Federation Conclusion Climate... 2024  
Barry E. Hill, Emily Bergeron CLIMATE JUSTICE LITIGATION IN THE UNITED STATES--A PRIMER 54 Environmental Law Reporter (ELI) 10307 (April, 2024) Over the last three decades, numerous studies have concluded that African American, Hispanic, Native American, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, and working-class White communities are disproportionately exposed to environmental harms and risks. More recent studies have concluded that although the adverse effects of climate change are being felt... 2024  
Natalie Lara CLIMATE MIGRATION AS CLIMATE RESILIENCE: A CASE STUDY OF ORLANDO, FLORIDA 54 Environmental Law Reporter (ELI) 10736 (September, 2024) In recent years, migration has become a topic of debate, especially in developed nations. Migration takes many forms, not only across international borders but also within a country. The decision to move is influenced by a number of factors, including life-cycle considerations such as marriage, completion of schooling, entry into the labor force,... 2024  
James R. May , Marcelo Buzaglo Dantas , Luciana Bauer CLIMATE RIGHTS IN BRAZIL AND THE UNITED STATES: A CONVERGENCE IN CONTRASTS 56 Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law 439 (Spring, 2024) I. Introduction. 439 II. Climate Rights in the United States. 444 A. Juliana v. United States. 446 B. Held v. Montana. 450 III. Climate Rights in Brazil. 452 IV. A Comparison of Climate Rights in Brazil and the U.S.. 463 V. Conclusion. 466 2024  
Julia Neusner, David Cremins, Ana Cutts Dougherty, Kelsey Freeman, Rosie Lebel, Milena Díaz, Nicole Chávez CLIMATE-RELATED DISPLACEMENT AND U.S. REFUGEE PROTECTION 42 UCLA Journal of Environmental Law & Policy 177 (2024) In an era defined by climate crises and mounting barriers to cross-border movement, this Article examines the intricate relationships between climate change, displacement, and refugee protection in the United States. Through a comprehensive analysis, incorporating insights from interviews with asylum seekers from Mexico and Central America at the... 2024  
Todd D. Amaral CONFLICTING GOALS: THE ETHICS AND ACCOUNTABILITY OF LAW FIRM ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL, AND GOVERNANCE (ESG) POLICIES 29 Roger Williams University Law Review 323 (Winter, 2024) Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) focused investing and the corresponding corporate adoption of ESG policies and practices is a driving force in modern business. The realization of the importance of ESG has led many law firms to establish multidisciplinary advisory practices to help clients address the policy and corporate governance... 2024  
Abigail McCeney CRIMMIGRATION ON PUBLIC LANDS: INTERAGENCY CONFLICTS OVER PRIORITIZING BORDER ENFORCEMENT AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION 54 Environmental Law 425 (Spring, 2024) Federal public lands along the United States southwestern border are a platform for regulatory disputes concerning the proper management of natural resources, infrastructure, human activity, and border security. U.S. border policy in recent decades has been characterized by the criminalization of the immigration system, which has led to increased... 2024  
Sam Bookman DEMYSTIFYING ENVIRONMENTAL CONSTITUTIONALISM 54 Environmental Law 1 (Winter, 2024) In an age of pervasive environmental crisis, a vast majority of the world's constitutions now include environmental provisions. But how does environmental constitutionalism improve environmental governance? Constitutionalization tells us little about how states should manage the environment. Instead, environmental constitutionalism is capable of... 2024  
William Boyd DE-RISKING ENVIRONMENTAL LAW 48 Harvard Environmental Law Review 153 (2024) Over the last forty years, risk assessment has come to provide the foundation for EPA's major regulatory programs on toxic chemicals, pollution, and hazardous waste--a development that seems quite natural, even necessary. The standard view holds that risk assessment is a largely technical, scientific exercise that provides the basic facts needed... 2024  
Maria Lins Albuquerque DISPUTES IN THE INDIGENOUS ENVIRONMENT IN BRAZIL 30 Dispute Resolution Magazine 11 (January, 2024) The main conflicts that occur in the Indigenous environment in Brazil are driven by disputes between economic activities that heavily utilize the land and the preservation of Indigenous territories. There is no resolution of conflicts without an understanding of the various interests involved. The main themes of dispute are related to the complex... 2024  
Hugh S. Van Scoy DISRUPTING DESTRUCTIONMENT: SUSTAINING GULLAH GEECHEE LAND OWNERSHIP THROUGH THE FAIR HOUSING ACT 20 University of Saint Thomas Law Journal 486 (Spring, 2024) The Gullah Geechee, descendants of enslaved Africans trafficked to the southeastern coast of the United States to work on rice, indigo, and sea island cotton plantations, have long been recognized for their rich cultural heritage and distinctive Gullah language. Over time, the Gullah Geechee have established thriving communities along the Atlantic... 2024  
Steven Ferrey DOWN TO THE WIRE: CONNECTING THE CRITICAL PATH TO CLIMATE 48 Vermont Law Review 505 (Summer, 2024) I. Public Attempts to Disconnect from Clean Energy. 507 II. State & Local Governments, Not the Federal Government, Control What Is Built to Mitigate Climate Change. 511 A. State and Local Opposition to Renewable Power. 511 B. What the Eastern United States Lacks. 515 C. Which Level of Government Controls Transmission and Siting: The Federal Power... 2024  
Holly K. Doyle E HO'I KA NANI I MOKU'ULA L: THE COMMISSION ON WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT'S PUBLIC TRUST DUTY TO FULLY RESTORE MOKU'ULA AND MOKUHINIA 46 University of Hawaii Law Review 313 (Spring, 2024) I. Introduction. 314 II. Exorcising Sugar's Ghost. 323 A. Legacy Diverters: Sugar Plantations Turned Land and Water Companies. 324 B. Maui Komohana's Decades-Long Struggle for Water Management Area Designation. 331 III. The Commission on Water Resource Management's Public Trust Duty to Restore Moku'ula and Mokuhinia. 335 A. Hawai'i's Legal Duty to... 2024  
Patience A. Crowder , Tom I. Romero, II EMBEDDING RACIAL JUSTICE IN THE WORK OF ENVIRONMENTAL NON-PROFITS 22 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 803 (Spring, 2024) A shift is occurring as social justice activists are leveraging the climate emergency to address social justice and climate activists are leveraging Black Lives Matter, #MeToo, and other social justice movements to motivate climate action. -Jennie Stevens In response to the national and worldwide protests against racial violence and the health... 2024  
Randall S. Abate , Chhaya Bhardwaj ENHANCING PROTECTION OF "CLIMATE REFUGEES" IN DESTINATION HUBS: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF LEGAL MECHANISMS AND GOVERNANCE CHALLENGES IN THE UNITED STATES AND INDIA 37 Harvard Human Rights Journal 293 (Summer, 2024) The plight of climate refugees is a global crisis that requires global cooperation and regional responses. The United States and India are important regional destination countries for climate refugees. Climate refugees are not recognized as a category of people entitled to protection in either country; however, legal mechanisms in both countries... 2024  
Noah Dreeben, Sophie Gelber, Gregory Hopp, Summer Oh, Alexandra Peterson, Hannah Redding, Robert Sassan ENVIRONMENTAL CRIMES 61 American Criminal Law Review 571 (Summer, 2024) I. Introduction. 573 A. Criminal Versus Civil Penalties. 574 B. Criminal Enforcement. 575 C. Interaction with Other Criminal Violations. 576 II. General Issues. 576 A. Overview of the Elements of an Environmental Criminal Violation. 576 B. Liability. 577 1. Individual Liability. 577 2. Corporate Liability. 578 C. Common Defenses. 579 1.... 2024  
Monica Visalam Iyer ENVIRONMENTAL MIGRATION IN REGIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS COURTS: A LIFEBOAT FROM THE "SINKING VESSEL" 91 Tennessee Law Review 363 (Winter, 2024) Introduction. 364 I. Background. 371 A. Regional Human Rights Courts. 371 B. The Principle of Non-Refoulement. 373 C. Environmental Non-Refoulement at the International Level. 376 D. Environmental Non-Refoulement Cases in Domestic Courts. 380 E. Key Takeaways from International and Domestic Jurisprudence. 382 II. Legal Framework. 386 A.... 2024  
Daniel Ziebarth EXISTING CHALLENGES AND POSSIBLE PATHWAYS FOR CASE SUCCESS IN CLIMATE LITIGATION WITH HUMAN RIGHTS CLAIMS 55 Saint Mary's Law Journal 511 (2024) I. Introduction. 512 II. Challenges. 516 A. Causality Challenge. 517 B. Cross-temporal Challenge. 519 C. Extraterritoriality Challenge. 521 III. Possible Pathways. 524 A. Youth. 524 B. Indigenous. 527 C. Current Wellbeing. 529 D. Future Wellbeing. 533 1. Public Actors and Future Wellbeing. 533 2. Private Actors and Future Wellbeing. 536 IV. Cases... 2024  
John Travis Marshall FARMLAND AND FORESTLAND IN AN ERA OF CLIMATE CHANGE: HURRICANE MICHAEL AND OPPORTUNITIES TO ADVANCE RURAL RESILIENCE 58 Georgia Law Review 1721 (10-Jun-24) Catastrophic disasters fundamentally destabilize and reshape communities. They often cause loss of life and invariably inflict extensive property damage. Disabled individuals, the elderly, chronically ill persons, and families struggling to make ends meet are almost always left more vulnerable. Affected communities frequently experience population... 2024  
Kevin Burdet FEEDING THE GOOD FIRE: PATHS TO FACILITATE NATIVE-LED FIRE MANAGEMENT ON FEDERAL LANDS 47 Seattle University Law Review 1443 (Spring, 2024) According to the traditional beliefs of the Salish, the Creator put animal beings on the earth before humans. But the world was cold and dark because there was no fire on earth. The animal beings knew one day human beings would arrive, and they wanted to make the world a better place for them, so they set off on a great quest to steal fire from the... 2024  
James Thuo Gathii FINANCING CLIMATE CHANGE THROUGH A RACIAL CAPITALISM LENS 41 Wisconsin International Law Journal 521 (Summer, 2024) In this Essay, I argue that the climate crisis has provided the global finance industry an opportunity to make exorbitant profits from majority Black and Brown countries in the Global South. I show how the global finance industry is leveraging its muscle over climate-vulnerable and heavily indebted countries in the Global South through complex... 2024  
Hannah Harris , Macquarie Law School, Sydney, NSW, Australia, Research Fellow, Financial Integrity Hub, Sydney, Australia, e-mail: Hannah.harris@mq.edu.au FINANCING ENVIRONMENTAL CRIME: FINANCIAL SECTOR COMPLICITY IN GLOBAL DEFORESTATION AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR REGULATORY INTERVENTION 115 IUS Gentium 43 (2024) Abstract In recent years, governments around the world have passed laws that criminalise the importation of illegally harvested timber in an effort to combat harmful deforestation and protect vital forest ecosystems. These destination country laws' focus on one important aspect of this substantial challenge, but they ignore the role of financial... 2024  
Matthew G. Burgess FIVE CONSIDERATIONS FOR TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY CLIMATE POLICY 18 FIU Law Review 283 (Spring, 2024) As the twenty-first century advances, society is entering a new phase regarding climate change. Impacts of climate change are becoming more salient in the present, rather than being only far-off in the future. Progress on flattening--and in many affluent countries, reducing--greenhouse gas emissions is also becoming salient, though the progress... 2024  
Ryan M. Rodenberg FLORIDA SPORTS BETTING LANDS AT THE SUPREME COURT--TWICE 75 Florida Law Review Forum 46 (2024) Florida is the epicenter of sports betting litigation. In two separate filings by the same party only days apart--one at the U.S. Supreme Court and the other at the Supreme Court of Florida -- the possibility of legal online sports gambling in the Sunshine State has landed in both Washington, D.C. and Tallahassee. At issue in both cases is the... 2024  
Mary Slosson FORCE MAJEURE AND THE LAW OF THE COLORADO RIVER: THE CONFLUENCE OF CLIMATE CHANGE, CONTRACTS, AND THE CONSTITUTION 95 University of Colorado Law Review 709 (2024) Climate change is causing significant, permanent changes to the natural world. In the Colorado River Basin, experts forecast that rising temperatures will cause the spread of a drier, more arid climate across the region. The effects of this desertification are already being felt: less rainfall, the loss of deciduous forests, wildfires that engulf... 2024  
Danielle Cossey FREE PEOPLE OVER FREE MARKETS: ADDRESSING THE SUPPRESSION OF ENVIRONMENTAL DISSENT THROUGH TRADE AGREEMENTS IN MEXICO AND THE UNITED STATES 14 Wake Forest Journal of Law and Policy 1 (January, 2024) I. Introduction II. Foreign Direct Investment and the Suppression of Dissent A. Environmental Defenders in Mexico and the U.S. B. Role of Foreign Direct Investment in Suppressing Dissent i. Violence and Impunity ii. Criminalization and Stigmatization iii. Procedural Barriers III. Governing Environmental Defenders, States, and Foreign Direct... 2024  
Reed D. Benson GREEN MONEY FOR WESTERN WATERS: NEW ENVIRONMENTAL GRANTS AND FEDERAL WATER POLICY 54 Environmental Law Reporter (ELI) 10040 (January, 2024) Congress in the 2020s has authorized three new environmentally focused grant programs relating to western waters and appropriated $450 million in multi-year funding. The Bureau of Reclamation is responsible for creating and implementing these programs, giving it a new tool and resources for addressing stubborn environmental problems--some caused by... 2024  
Margaret Von Rotz HONORING INDIGENOUS SOVEREIGNTY AND CONSENT: LEGAL FRAMEWORKS FOR ADDRESSING INDIGENOUS DISPLACEMENT DUE TO CLIMATE CHANGE 30 UC Law Environmental Journal 197 (May, 2024) Climate change-induced displacement is not only a possibility but a present reality. This problem affects marginalized communities everywhere, but Indigenous peoples, particularly those in disappearing States, are especially climate-vulnerable and often at risk of losing their ancestral lands forever due to climate change. Despite the inevitability... 2024  
Anya T. Janssen , Robert Lundberg HOW TRIBES RESPOND TO CHANGING ENVIRONMENTS 97-JUN Wisconsin Lawyer 32 (June, 2024) The earth's changing climate has significant ramifications for Indian tribes' subsistence needs, public health, economic stability, sovereignty, and traditional ways of life. This article discusses some causes of environmental harms that are faced by tribes in Wisconsin and nearby states and legal and policy approaches tribes can take to address... 2024  
Heather Tanana INDIGENOUS SCIENCE AND CLIMATE RESPONSES 49 Human Rights 18 (2024) The effects of climate change are increasingly being experienced around the world. From record-high temperatures and rising sea levels to aridification and wildfires--no one is immune. And, Indigenous people are often living on the frontlines, experiencing the first and worst consequences of climate change. Early in his administration, President... 2024  
Zachary Pavlik INTERSTATE WATER COMPACTING AND THE SILENCED SOVEREIGN: FEDERAL APPOINTEES AS A TRIGGER FOR THE FEDERAL TRUST RESPONSIBILITY 27 University of Denver Water Law Review 67 (Spring, 2024) I. INTRODUCTION. 68 II. INTERSTATE COMPACTING AND THE THREE SOVEREIGNS: FEDERAL, STATE, AND INDIAN INTERESTS. 70 A. The States as the Core Sovereigns in Interstate Compact Creation: A Framework Built to Facilitate and Further State Interests. 71 B. Federal Government as the Supreme Sovereign: Let the Children Play, So Long as They Don't Break... 2024  
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