AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
Magdalena Filipiuk Gonzalez A BREATH OF FRESH AIR: USING THE CLEAN AIR ACT TO ELIMINATE AIR POLLUTION HOT SPOTS 12 George Washington Journal of Energy & Environmental Law 137 (Summer, 2021) The Clean Air Act governs air quality in the United States through a coordinated effort between the Environmental Protection Agency and the states. This Note focuses on the Clean Air Act's National Ambient Air Quality Standards provisions, through which the Environmental Protection Agency regulates the nation's air by setting air quality standards... 2021  
Will Breland ACRES OF DISTRUST: HEIRS PROPERTY, THE LAW'S ROLE IN SOWING SUSPICION AMONG AMERICANS AND HOW LAWYERS CAN HELP CURB Black LAND LOSS 28 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 377 (Spring, 2021) In the last century, Black landownership has declined by roughly 90 percent. One agricultural attorney remarked of the phenomenon, I think the threat to Black-owned land is one of the biggest social issues of our time. The passing observer might hypothesize that the hemorrhaging of Black lands occurred in the distant past because of Jim Crow laws... 2021  
Margaret L. Satterthwaite ASSESSING THE RIGHTS TO WATER AND SANITATION: BETWEEN INSTITUTIONALIZATION AND RADICALIZATION 52 Georgetown Journal of International Law 315 (Winter, 2021) In the past two decades, the human rights to water and sanitation have emerged, matured, and taken their place at the center of discussions about rights, sustainable development, global health, and climate change. While there was early hope that these rights--especially the right to water--would provide a strong basis for rejecting the... 2021  
Jessica Wakefield ATTAINING CRIMINAL LAW ENDS THROUGH ENVIRONMENTAL MEANS 11 Arizona Journal of Environmental Law & Policy 228 (Summer, 2021) The criminal justice system is inefficient, ineffective, and fraught with laws and policies disparately impacting people of color and low-income individuals. There is no singular solution to crime, and the current system does not go far enough. If we are to achieve the goals set out by the criminal justice system of enhancing public safety and... 2021  
Joseph P. Tomain BRIDGING TROUBLED WATER: CLEAN ENERGY 50 YEARS AFTER THE GREENING OF AMERICA 69 University of Kansas Law Review 713 (June, 2021) 2020 marked the fiftieth anniversary of The Greening of America by Yale law professor Charles Reich and allows for its reassessment. Did Reich accurately predict the development of a new consciousness for America? Reich argued that Consciousness I (Con I) dominated late eighteenth and early nineteenth century thinking and was best seen as an... 2021  
Maya K. van Rossum, Kacy C. Manahan CONSTITUTIONAL GREEN AMENDMENTS 36-FALL Natural Resources & Environment 27 (Fall, 2021) Imagine if you couldn't trust the water coming out of your faucets because it was tainted with dangerous levels of lead or cancer-causing chemicals. Imagine if the air quality was so poor in your neighborhood that you couldn't safely enjoy the outdoors without fear of an air pollution--induced heart attack or asthma attack. What if research showed... 2021  
Melissa Mitchell (Zeid) CRUEL, UNUSUAL, AND TOXIC: THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS OF MASS INCARCERATION IN THE UNITED STATES 11 Arizona Journal of Environmental Law & Policy 267 (Summer, 2021) This note examines the environmental issues associated with mass incarceration. It will first discuss mass incarceration and environmental injustices generally. Then it will assert that, due to the increased demand for prison facilities, mass incarceration led to an era of building prisons on the cheapest, easiest to obtain sites: toxic waste sites... 2021  
Hannah Perls DECONSTRUCTING ENVIRONMENTAL DEREGULATION UNDER THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION 45 Vermont Law Review 591 (Summer, 2021) Introduction. 592 I. Strategy 1: Undermine Agencies' Scientific and Expert Capacities. 593 A. Step 1: Block the Collection of Information Needed to Justify Forward-Looking Regulation. 594 B. Step 2: Undermine the Integrity of Scientific Expert Review Committees. 596 C. Step 3: Preclude EPA from Relying on Critical Public Health Studies. 602 II.... 2021  
James M. Grijalva ENDING THE INTERMINABLE GAP IN Indian COUNTRY WATER QUALITY PROTECTION 45 Harvard Environmental Law Review 1 (2021) Tribal self-determination in modern environmental law holds the tantalizing prospect of translating indigenous environmental value judgments into legally enforceable requirements of federal regulatory programs. Congress authorized this approach three decades ago, but few tribes have sought primacy even for foundational programs like Clean Water Act... 2021  
David E. Adelman , Jori Reilly-Diakun ENVIRONMENTAL CITIZEN SUITS AND THE INEQUITIES OF RACES TO THE TOP 92 University of Colorado Law Review 377 (Spring, 2021) Environmental citizen suits were founded on the belief that empowering organizations and individuals to take legal action would provide a backstop against lax federal or state programs. Working in conjunction with the system of cooperative federalism, citizen suits were designed to uphold minimum levels of environmental protection and to provide a... 2021  
Terry Ann Campbell ENVIRONMENTAL CONSTITUTIONALISM: MARRYING THE DUE PROCESS CLAUSE AND THE EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE WITH CLIMATE CHANGE 22 Vermont Journal of Environmental Law 103 (Spring, 2021) Introduction. 104 I. Background. 107 A. The U.S. is Yet to Recognize That Climate Change is a Global Issue That has Nefarious Effects on Human and Civil Rights. 108 B. Violating the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments is Contrary to the Rule of Law. 109 C. Climate Change Imposes an Obligation to Protect Fundamental Rights. 111 D. The Juliana III Ruling... 2021  
Rebecca Bratspies, Vanessa Casado Perez, Robin Kundis Craig, Lissa Griffin, Keith Hirokawa, Sarah Krakoff, Katrina Kuh, Jessica Owley, Melissa Powers, Shannon Roesler, Jonathan Rosenbloom, J.B. Ruhl, Erin Ryan, David Takacs ENVIRONMENTAL LAW, DISRUPTED BY COVID-19 51 Environmental Law Reporter (ELI) 10509 (June, 2021) For over a year, the COVID-19 pandemic and concerns about systemic racial injustice have highlighted the conflicts and opportunities currently faced by environmental law. Scientists uniformly predict that environmental degradation, notably climate change, will cause a rise in diseases, disproportionate suffering among communities already facing... 2021  
Kimberly L. Bick ENVIRONMENTAL PARITY AND OUTDOOR EQUITY 63-APR Orange County Lawyer 36 (April, 2021) This month we celebrate Earth Day, but Earth Day represents more than one day set aside to plant trees or pick up trash at the beach. It was founded after three-million gallons of crude oil spilled into the Pacific Ocean just off the coast of Santa Barbara, California, in 1969, creating an oil slick thirty-five miles long along California's coast... 2021  
Brandon I. Weinreb ESPORTS AND HARASSMENT: ANALYZING PLAYER PROTECTIONS IN A HOSTILE WORK ENVIRONMENT 57 California Western Law Review 473 (Spring, 2021) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 474 I. The Nature & Increasing Popularity of Esports. 476 A. What is Esports?. 476 B. The Rise of Esports. 478 II. Employment Status of Esports Players. 479 A. The Economic-Realities Test. 480 B. Esports Players Are Employees Under the Economic-Realities Test. 482 III. Title VII & the Hostile Nature of Online... 2021  
Martha F. Davis FREEDOM FROM THIRST: A RIGHT TO BASIC HOUSEHOLD WATER 42 Cardozo Law Review 879 (June, 2021) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 879 I. A Fifth Freedom?. 887 II. Finding the Human Right to Water. 894 III. The Constitutional Right to Water Around the World. 900 IV. Constitutional Rights to Basic Water under United States Law. 904 Conclusion. 910 2021  
Joerika Stitt GUN VIOLENCE AND DE FACTO SEGREGATION: COULD ENVIRONMENTAL DISCRIMINation BE FUELING CHICAGO'S SOARING GUN VIOLENCE? 11 Wake Forest Journal of Law and Policy 395 (2021) Shirley Chambers is a Chicago resident who has experienced the unimaginable: her four children, three sons and one daughter, were all shot and killed in Chicago's Lawndale neighborhood. After her first three children were murdered, Ms. Chambers recalled feeling sadder for her last remaining son more than she felt for herself. She reported, I... 2021  
Sascha Dov Bachmann , Ikechukwu P. Ugwu HARDIN'S 'TRAGEDY OF THE COMMONS': IndigenOUS PEOPLES' RIGHTS AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION: MOVING TOWARDS AN EMERGING NORM OF IndigenOUS RIGHTS PROTECTION? 6 One J: Oil and Gas, Natural Resources, and Energy Journal 547 (May, 2021) Most of the world's natural resources can be found on the territories of indigenous peoples. This puts indigenous peoples in a position where they are not only subjected to environmental hazards, as a result of the mining and exploitation of these resources, but are also denied the use and control of these resources. In addition, the proximity to... 2021  
Todd Anthony Walker HEALING RACISM'S WOUNDS: ON RACIAL RECKONING & OBAMA'S "A PROMISED LAND" 6 Columbia Human Rights Law Review Online 34 (November 11, 2021) Legal controversies surrounding race and racism have persisted in America from its inception, but not without intervention. Supreme Court decisions in Dred Scott, Plessy and Brown trace the Court's jurisprudential evolution while, legislatively, the passage of the post-civil rights Amendments, and, more recently, The Civil Rights Act of 1964,... 2021  
David B. Schorr HORIZONTAL AND VERTICAL INFLUENCES IN COLONIAL LEGAL TRANSPLANTATION: WATER BY-LAWS IN BRITISH PALESTINE 61 American Journal of Legal History 308 (September, 2021) Local by-laws were the primary tool for local governments in British-ruled Palestine to exercise their authority, and water was the paradigmatic subject for local legislation. Looking at the diffusion of legal norms in local by-laws in the 1930s and 1940s, the article examines the dynamics of lawmaking in a context characterized both by imperial... 2021  
Annie Petsonk HOW PROFESSOR STEWART HAS PROMOTED EQUITY, EFFECTIVENESS, AND TRANSPARENCY IN ENVIRONMENTAL LAW: A PRACTITIONER'S VIEW 29 New York University Environmental Law Journal 659 (2021) Introduction. 659 I. Promoting Equity and Effectiveness: Proof Positive in California. 660 II. Transparency: Proof Positive in International Administrative Law. 667 III. Concluding Remarks: A Personal Look-Back and Look-Ahead. 673 2021  
Travis D. Jones HUMANS LONG IGNORED: REVISITING NEPA'S DEFINITION OF "HUMAN ENVIRONMENT" IN THE ERA OF Black LIVES MATTER 32 Villanova Environmental Law Journal 1 (2021) In 2020, the Black Lives Matter movement brought state-sanctioned violence against African Americans to the forefront of public discourse. In the wake of the horrific killing of George Floyd, highly charged protests exploded around the country, from Washington D.C. to Dallas to Portland. Across the internet, social media timelines and profile... 2021  
Kenneth A. Stahl INCORPORATING TRANSPORTATION TOPICS INTO THE LAND USE CURRICULUM 106 Iowa Law Review 2451 (July, 2021) Land use and transportation are intricately linked. Transportation intersects with some of the most important issues covered in the land use law curriculum, including among others the wisdom of Euclidean zoning ordinances that mandate the segregation of uses, the advantages and disadvantages of ad hoc land use decision-making processes... 2021  
Aila Hoss IndianA'S Indian LAWS: IndigenOUS ERASURE AND RACISM IN THE LAND OF THE IndianS 30-SPG Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy 184 (Spring, 2021) In response to a request for funding on Tribal and Indian law research, a director level position from Indiana University who reviewed a draft of the proposal stated that the author needed to clear why a team from the middle of Indiana is positioned to conduct this research and that it is her job to point out the obvious. In the author's... 2021  
Dr. Daniel Rietiker IndigenOUS PEOPLES' RIGHT TO WATER IN TIMES OF COVID-19: ASSESSMENT OF THE PROTECTION UNDER INTERNationAL LAW AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR HUMAN RIGHTS LITIGATION 44 Suffolk Transnational Law Review 1 (Winter, 2021) While rivers flow through Navajo lands and are used to irrigate golf courses in Phoenix, the Navajo lack legal entitlement to that water and amidst the coronavirus crisis, cannot even get sufficient plumbing to wash their hands. Indigenous peoples have suffered and continue to suffer from human rights abuses more than the rest of the population.... 2021  
Cody Uyeda MOUNTAINS, TELESCOPES, AND BROKEN PROMISES: THE DIGNITY TAKING OF HAWAII'S CEDED LANDS 28 Asian American Law Journal 65 (2021) Introduction. 66 I. Why Native Hawaiian Dignity Restoration Matters Today. 67 A. Bettering Native Hawaiian Health. 67 B. Re-Righting Hawaiian History. 69 II. Hawaii's Annexation and Formation of the Ceded Lands. 70 A. Overthrow and Annexation. 70 B. Formation of Hawaii's Ceded Lands. 71 C. The Ceded Lands Dispute. 74 D. The Ceded Lands Today. 76... 2021  
Jesse Hevia NEPA AND GENTRIFICATION: USING FEDERAL ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW TO COMBAT URBAN DISPLACEMENT 70 Emory Law Journal 711 (2021) Cities are embracing green spaces and environmental amenities. But as government and private investment surges into urban neighborhoods, residents of historically disinvested communities are evicted and displaced to make room for a wealthier--and often whiter--demographic. The National Environmental Policy Act requires federal agencies to prepare... 2021  
Matthew Woodward NOT APPROVED FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION: A STUDY OF THE DENMARK WATER CRISIS, A CALL FOR REFORMING THE SDWA, AND A DEMAND FOR COMMUNITY LAWYERING IN RURAL AMERICA 45 William and Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review 881 (Spring, 2021) Over the past four decades, nine million Americans have ingested dangerous drinking water from a trusted source: their own taps. Each year, an estimated 16.4 million cases of acute gastroenteritis are linked to public drinking water. For many Americans, drinking water--perhaps the most important cornerstone of human health--has become cause for... 2021  
Anika Singh Lemar OVERPARTICIPATION: DESIGNING EFFECTIVE LAND USE PUBLIC PROCESSES 90 Fordham Law Review 1083 (December, 2021) There are more opportunities for public participation in the planning and zoning process today than there were in the decades immediately after states adopted the first zoning enabling acts. As a result, today, public participation, dominated by nearby residents, drives most land use planning and zoning decisions. Enhanced public participation... 2021  
Jennifer Black, Amanda Moreland, Montrece McNeill Ransom, Emely Sanchez PERFLUOROALKYL AND POLYFLUOROALKYL SUBSTANCES: USING LAW AND POLICY TO ADDRESS THESE ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH HAZARDS IN THE UNITED STATES 31 Health Matrix: Journal of Law-Medicine 341 (2021) C1-2Contents Introduction. 342 I. Phase-Out Actions. 346 A. PFOA Stewardship Program. 347 B. TSCA. 348 C. Stockholm Convention. 350 II. Current Federal Approaches. 352 A. Safe Drinking Water Act. 352 B. EPA's Health Advisories. 355 C. ATSDR and CERCLA. 358 D. Congressional Actions. 361 III. Current State Approaches. 363 IV. Looking Forward. 366 2021  
Karen Engle , Lucas Lixinski QUILOMBO LAND RIGHTS, BRAZILIAN CONSTITUTIONALISM, AND RACIAL CAPITALISM 54 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 831 (October, 2021) The 1988 Brazilian Constitution, the first in a wave of new democratic and multicultural constitutions in Latin America, contains a transitory provision guaranteeing collective land rights to quilombo communities. These communities are composed of quilombolas, primarily descendants of formerly enslaved Africans, many of whom had escaped slavery. A... 2021  
Danielle A. Bernstein REASONABLENESS IN HOSTILE WORK ENVIRONMENT CASES AFTER #METOO 28 Michigan Journal of Gender & Law 119 (2021) The #MeToo movement, a global social response to sexual harassment in the workplace, has turned the traditional approach to sexual harassment on its head. Instead of shielding perpetrators and discrediting survivors, employers, the media, and the public have begun to shift from presuming the credibility of the perpetrator to presuming the... 2021  
Bernard James RESTORATIVE JUSTICE LIABILITY: SCHOOL DISCIPLINE REFORM AND THE RIGHT TO SAFE SCHOOLS 51 University of Memphis Law Review 557 (Spring, 2021) I. The Common Wisdom on Student Safety. 557 II. Alterations in the Underlying Law on Student Safety. 561 III. School Discipline Reform: Conflicting Responses to Misconduct. 568 IV. The Three Great Questions on Liability. 573 Litigation challenging school discipline policies is on the upswing. Ordinarily, courts act to constrain judicial review of... 2021  
Samia R. Broadaway, Paulina Williams RETROSPECTIVE ON DRINKING WATER LITIGATION FROM FLINT, MICHIGAN 52 No. 4 ABA Trends 6 (March/April, 2021) The facts of Flint, Michigan's water crisis are now well known: in April 2014, the city of Flint, facing serious financial trouble, was supervised by an emergency manager appointed by then-Governor Snyder. The emergency manager was tasked with implementing cost-saving measures. In one such cost-saving effort, the city switched its water supply from... 2021  
Monica Krup RIOT BOOSTING: SOUTH DAKOTA'S INTEGRATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL, IndigenOUS, AND FIRST AMENDMENT CONCERNS AND THE RHETORIC ON PROTEST 22 Rutgers Race & the Law Review 293 (2021) In early 2019, the South Dakota legislature passed an urgent law that punishes and criminalizes those who participate in riots throughout the state. The law was a clear infringement on First Amendment Freedom of Speech and Freedom of Association rights and was executed as a direct response to the Standing Rock protests occurring in North Dakota... 2021  
Dana McClure SLEEP NOW IN THE FIRE: ANTI-PROTEST LAWS AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENT 11 Arizona Journal of Environmental Law & Policy 209 (Summer, 2021) So raise your fists And march around Just don't take what you need I'll jail and bury those committed And smother the rest in greed Since 2017, in response to the nonviolent protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline, more than a dozen states across the country adopted legislation limiting citizens' ability to protest against fossil fuel... 2021  
Cristal E. Jones, M.B.A. , University of Oregon School of Law STILL STRANGERS IN THE LAND: ACHIEVEMENT BARRIERS, BURDENS, AND BRIDGES FACING African american STUDENTS WITHIN PREDOMINATELY WHITE LAW SCHOOLS 39 Minnesota Journal of Law & Inequality 13 (Winter, 2021) This Article examines the barriers to an environment where African American law students no longer view themselves, and no longer are viewed as, what American abolitionist Harriet Tubman coined, a stranger in a strange land. In this Article, I explain the research on the structural, psychological, and social factors that face the African American... 2021  
James Pollack , Frank Sturges STRUGGLING TO FIND A RAPANOS NEXUS: MAUI AND THE EXPANSION OF CLEAN WATER ACT REGULATION 48 Ecology Law Quarterly 49 (2021) The Supreme Court has long struggled to define the scope of federal jurisdiction over pollution control under the Clean Water Act (CWA). During the Court's last term, that issue returned to the forefront in County of Maui, Hawaii v. Hawaii Wildlife Fund. The case involved pollution from a wastewater treatment facility that reached the Pacific Ocean... 2021  
Jeff Todd THE (DE)MYSTIFICATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL INJUSTICE: A DRAMATISTIC ANALYSIS OF LAW 93 Temple Law Review 597 (Spring, 2021) Although Kenneth Burke is the preeminent rhetorician of the modern era, and his theories have been applied to issues of social change and the environment (including by legal scholars), the role of justice and law in his critical method of dramatism have received only passing treatment. This Article is therefore the first in any discipline to... 2021  
Robert B. Keiter THE EMERGING LAW OF OUTDOOR RECREATION ON THE PUBLIC LANDS 51 Environmental Law 89 (Spring, 2021) Outdoor recreation is assuming a prominent role across the public lands, presenting the responsible federal agencies with difficult, new management challenges. Since World War II, recreational uses of public lands have been on a steady upward trajectory, which has only accelerated during this century. Today, an increasingly diverse array of outdoor... 2021  
Roger Merino THE LAND OF NationS: IndigenOUS STRUGGLES FOR PROPERTY AND TERRITORY IN INTERNationAL LAW 115 AJIL Unbound 129 (2021) Key studies have highlighted how Western law was central to the civilizing mission of colonialism, legitimizing conquest while presenting itself as a colonizer's gift for overcoming barbarism. But law was not just an imposition to dispossess resources and accumulate labor; it was also transformed by the contestations of First Nations and the new... 2021  
Ann M. Eisenberg, Elizabeth Kronk Warner THE PRECIPICE OF JUSTICE: EQUITY, ENERGY, AND THE ENVIRONMENT IN Indian COUNTRY AND RURAL COMMUNITIES 42 Energy Law Journal 281 (2021) Editor's Note: As the authors mention at footnote 1, the ideas presented in their essay were first shared during a panel presentation in February of this year at the at the University of Florida Levin College of Law's annual Public Interest Environmental Conference. We and the authors have described their piece as an essay and not an article... 2021  
Meghan O'Connor THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR HAS THE AUTHORITY TO TAKE LAND INTO TRUST FOR FEDERALLY RECOGNIZED ALASKA TribES 45 American Indian Law Review 89 (2021) Acreage proves Alaska is the largest state in the United States by far, but for Alaska Natives this land, specifically trust land, has posed an issue for decades. For almost forty years, the Department of the Interior (DOI) has debated over whether the Secretary of the Interior can take land into trust in Alaska. Trust land is an important tool to... 2021  
Chloe Ahmann, Cornell University THE SUSTAINABILITY MYTH: ENVIRONMENTAL GENTRIFICATION AND THE POLITICS OF JUSTICE, MELISSA CHECKER (NEW YORK: NYU PRESS, 2020) 44 PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review 1 (2021) I ordered them to build [the Emerald City], and . I put green spectacles on all the people, so that everything they saw was green. But isn't everything here green? asked Dorothy. No more than in any other city, replied Oz. - L. Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz Surely this is the revelation Melissa Checker has in mind when she calls... 2021  
Barry E. Hill TIME HAS COME TODAY FOR ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE JUSTICE LEGISLATION 51 Environmental Law Reporter (ELI) 10102 (February, 2021) The Stock Market Crash of 1929, and the Great Depression that followed from August 1929-March 1933, shook the foundation of America to its core. During a July 24, 1933, radio address, President Franklin D. Roosevelt (D) coined the phrase the first 100 days, specifically referring to the period of time in which a new administration's success in... 2021  
Samantha T. Edgell TOTO, I'VE A FEELING THE ENVIRONMENT ISN'T SAFE FROM CRYPTOCURRENCY ANYMORE: THE DEGRADING ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF BITCOIN AND DIGITAL CURRENCIES 32 Villanova Environmental Law Journal 69 (2021) Cryptocurrencies are traded forms of digital assets that are extracted from digital locations after high-powered computers run complex algorithms. The mining of cryptocurrencies has a detrimental effect on the environment. Although it may seem that cryptocurrency and climate change are unrelated, studies have shown there to be a strong connection.... 2021  
Jaime Alison Lee TURNING PARTICIPATION INTO POWER: A WATER JUSTICE CASE STUDY 28 George Mason Law Review 1003 (Spring, 2021) Water systems throughout the United States are broken, both literally and figuratively. The purpose of water utilities is to provide access to clean and convenient water, which promotes human health and productivity. Yet, a growing number of utilities charge unconscionable prices for water and otherwise carry out policies that decrease, rather than... 2021  
Alyson Merlin UNENFORCED PROMISES: TREATY RIGHTS AS A MECHANISM TO ADDRESS THE IMPACT OF ENERGY PROJECTS NEAR TribAL LANDS 11 Columbia Journal of Race and Law 373 (April, 2021) Treaties between the United States and Native nations are binding until abrogated by the clear and plain intent of Congress. Many treaties signed in the 18th and 19th centuries remain unabrogated, but are also unenforced by the courts of the United States. The Dewey Burdock Project is a proposed uranium mining operation which would sit adjacent to... 2021  
Skye M. Walker WARS, WALLS, AND WRECKED ECOSYSTEMS: THE CASE FOR PRIORITIZING ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION IN A NationAL SECURITY-CENTRIC LEGAL SYSTEM 51 Environmental Law 913 (Summer, 2021) Maintaining a strong military. Furthering national security by securing the skies, seas, and borders. Promoting peace and order by using tear gas to diffuse chaotic and potentially dangerous situations. To the U.S. government, these are laudable objectives--objectives that often outweigh other policy goals such as environmental conservation. As a... 2021  
Jennifer J. Seely WATER BANKS IN WASHINGTON STATE: A TOOL FOR CLIMATE RESILIENCE 96 Washington Law Review 729 (June, 2021) Water banks--a tool for exchanging senior water rights and offsetting new ones--can address multiple problems in contemporary water law. In the era of climate change, water banks enable needed flexibility and resilience in water allocation. As growing cities require new water rights, water banks can repurpose old water for new uses. These... 2021  
Philippe Cullet , Lovleen Bhullar , Sujith Koonan WATER SECURITY AND INTERNationAL LAW 17 Annual Review of Law and Social Science 261 (2021) energy, environment, food, international law, rights, security, water International law seeks to ensure water security and to prevent or resolve conflicts leading to water insecurity. This relationship is based on a hybrid framework comprising binding and nonbinding instruments. The multiscalar dimensions of water (in)security are recognized, but... 2021  
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