AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
Josiah Wolf SPRAWL AND CLIMATE CATASTROPHE: NORMATIVE CHALLENGES IN ZONING FOR DECARBONIZATION 37 Tulane Environmental Law Journal 129 (Winter, 2024) I. Introduction. 129 II. Sprawl, Zoning, and Decarbonization. 131 A. The Impact of Climate Change on the Urban Environment. 131 B. Why is Addressing Climate Change Through Land Use Policy So Crucial?. 133 C. Zoning's History, Facilitation of Sprawl, and Unfortunate Incentives. 137 III. Preemption, the Administrative State, and Legitimacy. 141 A.... 2024  
Ada Montague Stepleton , Sapphire Carter STRANGE BEDFELLOWS: STATES, TRIBES, AND WATER RIGHTS 47 Public Land & Resources Law Review 77 (2024) I. Introduction. 79 II. Research Process. 83 III. Legal Background. 84 A. General Overview of Reserved Indian Water Rights. 85 B. The Winters Doctrine. 85 C. McCarren Amendment. 88 D. State Water Administration Systems. 90 1. Prior Appropriation and Federally Reserved Indian Water Rights. 90 2. Riparian Rights and Federally Reserved Indian Water... 2024  
Stephen D. Earsom STRIKING BEFORE THE IRON IS HOT: HOW TRIBES IN THE EAST CAN ASSERT THEIR WINTERS RIGHTS TO PROTECT TRIBAL SOVEREIGNTY & MITIGATE CLIMATE CHANGE 42 Virginia Environmental Law Journal 47 (2024) Federally recognized tribes have been denied access to their legal allotments of water for over two centuries through a combination of federal assimilation and annihilation programs, inequitable provision of irrigation systems by federal agencies, and hostile state governments. The Winters doctrine is leaned upon heavily by tribes in the western... 2024  
Jade A. Craig STRUGGLE AGAINST THE WATER: CONNECTING FAIR HOUSING LAW AND CLIMATE JUSTICE 24 Nevada Law Journal 737 (Spring, 2024) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 737 I. Background. 748 A. The Designation of Locations for Black Communities. 748 B. Flooding and the Legacy of Redlining. 754 II. Equitable Relocation. 755 III. Fair Housing in the Age of Climate Retreat. 768 A. Considering Whether to Relocate. 775 B. Buyout Programs and Fair Housing. 779 C. Deciding Where to... 2024  
Nicholas E. Armstrong SWEAT EQUITY: A CONTEMPORARY ANALYSIS OF LAND DISPOSSESSION OF BLACK FARMERS IN THE SOUTHERN UNITED STATES 73 Washington University Journal of Law & Policy 408 (2024) Black rural land ownership is not what it was once was and Black rural landowners own far less than what they could and should own. Upwards of ninety percent of Black rural landowners have been dispossessed of their land due to government agency failure, systemic discrimination, and private prejudice that has shaped the legal landscaped since... 2024  
Rose Cuison-Villazor THE 2023 ALIEN LAND LAWS AND HISTORICAL AMNESIA 46 Western New England Law Review 102 (2024) Thank you Western New England Law Review, Andrew Loin (Editor-in-Chief), and Dean Zelda Harris for inviting me to participate in this incredibly powerful conference. I have learned so much from the speakers and panel discussions today. It truly is an honor to be part of this symposium. Since I am one of the last speakers of the day, I thought that... 2024  
Scott W. Stern THE CASE FOR CLIMATE REPARATIONS 128 Dickinson Law Review 529 (Winter, 2024) Climate reparations are, to employ an old cliché, an idea whose time has come. Of course, calls for reparations have been emanating from the Global South since long before scholars in the Global North started paying attention. The United States has been in the midst of a public debate over reparations for many years. And reparations have become... 2024  
Gina S. Warren THE CHRONIC GROWING PROBLEM: ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL JUSTICE CONCERNS WITH INDOOR CANNABIS GROWS 45 Cardozo Law Review 1901 (August, 2024) The rapid legalization of recreational marijuana across states has created en vironmental and social justice issues, particularly with indoor cultivation. Despite its federal illegality, twenty-four states and various territories have legalized marijuana, igniting a surge in indoor cultivation that bears significant environmental and social... 2024  
Keith H. Hirokawa, Cinnamon P. Carlarne THE CLIMATE MORATORIUM 11 Texas A&M Law Review 365 (Winter, 2024) Climate change is our new reality. The impacts of climatic changes, including massive forest fires, floods, drought, severe storms, saltwater intrusion, and the resulting migration of people displaced by such impacts, will continue to ravage communities across the nation into the foreseeable future. In the meantime, communities continue to expand... 2024  
Shantal Pai THE EFFECT OF HISTORICAL TRIBAL POLICY AND PROPERTY RIGHTS ON ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION 39-SUM Natural Resources & Environment 47 (Summer, 2024) Before there were Europeans in the United States, there were Indigenous people. They governed independently through sophisticated governments that included tribal laws, cultural traditions, religious customs, and societal systems. Native American nations treated each other as sovereign governments, often negotiating treaties with each other to... 2024  
Jae Woon Lee, Antigoni Lykotrafiti, Máté Gergely THE EU-ASEAN COMPREHENSIVE AIR TRANSPORT AGREEMENT (2022): FROM REGIONAL TO INTERREGIONAL TO GLOBAL? 89 Journal of Air Law and Commerce 391 (Summer, 2024) The EU-ASEAN Comprehensive Air Transport Agreement (CATA) is the latest example of the EU's effort to set a global benchmark in the regulation of international air transport. The EU-ASEAN CATA is an exceptional ASA for its geographic coverage, liberalizing impact, and expanded substantive scope. As the first-ever bloc-to-bloc ATA with 27 EU... 2024  
Islam Attia THE JUDICIALIZATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE: THE TECHNIQUE AND ITS PROLIFERATION 56 New York University Journal of International Law & Politics 833 (Spring, 2024) --Nothing falls beyond the purview of judicial review --Interpretation is the only game in town On 29 March 2023, the UN General Assembly (UNGA) requested an advisory opinion from the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the legal consequences of climate change under several regimes including international human rights law. Due to the... 2024  
Cosmas Emeziem THE LAW OF THE SEA CONVENTION 1982 AT FORTY-TWO: MILESTONES, TURBULENT WATERS, AND GLOBAL PEACE 55 George Washington International Law Review 393 (2024) This Article briefly explores the forty-two-year history of the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS or the Convention), looking at its milestones, challenges, and enduring puzzles about the law of the Sea and the current realities of international relations. Often referred to as the constitution of the oceans, UNCLOS is... 2024  
Daina Bray, Thomas M. Poston THE METHANE MAJORS: CLIMATE CHANGE AND ANIMAL AGRICULTURE IN U.S. COURTS 49 Columbia Journal of Environmental Law 145 (2024) Over two dozen lawsuits have been filed in U.S. courts against fossil fuel companies by state and local government plaintiffs alleging climate harms and deceptions. But there are other central actors beyond these Carbon Majors that contribute heavily to the warming climate. Prominent among them is the animal agriculture sector, a significant... 2024  
Ilias Bantekas THE OFF-GRID REVOLUTION AND THE "PROMISE" OF ENERGY EQUALITY UNDER THE PARIS CLIMATE CHANGE AGREEMENT 23 Northwestern Journal of Human Rights 43 (Fall, 2024) Abstract--A key thesis of this article is that since renewable energy is quintessentially a public good both in constitutional and macroeconomic terms, its availability without restrictions to all people is a true manifestation of economic self-determination, ultimately entailing what this author calls energy equality. Although this equality is... 2024  
Nicholas S. Bryner THE ONCE AND FUTURE CLEAN AIR ACT: IMPACTS OF THE INFLATION REDUCTION ACT ON EPA'S REGULATORY AUTHORITY 65 Boston College Law Review 1 (January, 2024) Introduction. 3 I. History of the Clean Air Act's Technology-Forcing Standards. 7 A. Air Quality and Technology Standards in the Clean Air Act. 10 B. Technology-Forcing Standards in the 1970 Clean Air Act. 11 C. New Source Review: Technology-based Standards Balanced with Cost on a Case-by-Case Basis. 12 1. The Scope of NSR. 13 2. Application:... 2024  
Jennifer O'Rourke THE OVERLOOKED COMMUNITIES OF FORCED DISPLACEMENT IN THE UNITED STATES: HUMANIZING THE RELOCATION OF INDIGENOUS TRIBES IN THE FACE OF CLIMATE CHANGE 92 University of Cincinnati Law Review 850 (2024) For Tribal communities on the coastlands of Louisiana, the effects of climate change are not a distant threat, but an ever-present force of destruction. For Chantel Comardelle, the daughter of the deputy Tribal Chief of the Isle de Jean Charles band of the Biloxi-Chitimacha-Choctaw Tribe, the effects are both devastating and permanent: Once our... 2024  
Michael J. Kelly THE RIGHT TO A HEALTHY ENVIRONMENT: UNDERLYING POLICY FORMATION CHALLENGES IN THE UNITED STATES DURING THE TRUMP ERA 56 Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law 117 (Spring, 2024) I. Introduction. 117 II. Health Policy Failure. 123 III. Climate Change Policy Failure. 135 IV. Enforcement. 143 V. Conclusion. 146 Appendix. 147 2024  
Kyle J. Bobeck THE RIGHT TO BREATHE: A CONSTITUTIONAL PATH TO AN ENVIRONMENTAL AMENDMENT 85 University of Pittsburgh Law Review 433 (Winter, 2024) The constitutions of more than three-quarters of the countries on Earth explicitly reference environmental rights or responsibilities, but that is not the case in the United States. The U.S. Constitution contains no unequivocal right to a clean environment, and attempts to sway federal judges to find an implied right have not been successful.... 2024  
Leonard R. Powell THE SUPREME COURT AND TRIBAL WATER RIGHTS 49 Human Rights 4 (2024) Few issues in the American West are as pressing or as vexing as the escalating water crisis. And as water in the West continues to dry up, Tribal water rights become more and more critical with every passing year. Against this backdrop, the U.S. Supreme Court recently decided Arizona v. Navajo Nation, a case that asked whether the Navajo Nation's... 2024  
Dave Owen THE WATER DISTRICT AND THE STATE 134 Yale Law Journal 1 (October, 2024) In much of the American West, water districts dominate water governance. These districts serve vitally important functions in regions challenged by aridity, growing populations, and climate change. These districts also often operate within boundaries developed a century ago, or more, and under governing rules that are undemocratic by design. In... 2024  
Isaac Lunt TOWARD DISTRIBUTED NATURE: THE AFFORESTATION EASEMENT AND A REGENERATIVE LAND ETHIC 124 Columbia Law Review 1081 (May, 2024) Anthropogenic climate change is altering humanity's relationship to the natural world. As extreme weather events become more frequent and biodiversity plummets, humankind has three responsibilities: lower carbon dioxide emissions, preserve what remains of the natural world, and generate new pockets of nature to slowly rebuild what we have... 2024  
Frances Williamson TRIBAL WATER RIGHTS: PRIVATE LAW ALTERNATIVES TO THE FEDERAL TRUST DOCTRINE 61 San Diego Law Review 407 (May-June, 2024) C1-2Table of Contents Abstract. 408 I. Introduction. 408 II. History and Background of Tribal Water Rights. 412 A. Tribal Waters and the Western Drought. 412 B. The Winters Doctrine. 415 C. The Quantification of Tribal Water Rights. 418 D. The Legal Issues with Tribal Water Rights. 422 III. Water Rights as Within the Federal Trust. 426 A. The... 2024  
Samuel Joyce TRIBAL WATER SOVEREIGNTY: AUTHORIZING INDIAN WATER MARKETING IN THE COLORADO BASIN 35 Stanford Law and Policy Review 161 (February, 2024) In January 2023, Congress passed the Colorado River Indian Tribes Water Resiliency Act, authorizing the Colorado River Indian Tribes to lease part of its Colorado River water allocation to off-reservation users. The law grants the Colorado River Indian Tribes some of the rights that are already enjoyed by private water users, and creates an... 2024  
Robin Kundis Craig TRIBES AND WATER IN THE WAKE OF NAVAJO NATION AND SACKETT: TREATIES, WINTERS, MONTANA, AND RIGHTS OF NATURE 48 William and Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review 687 (Spring, 2024) Freshwater resources in the United States face a variety of stressors, including drought, flooding, and climate change-driven shifts in precipitation, that exacerbate both water quality problems and drinking water crises. In the midst of these increasing issues regarding both water quality and quantity (allocation), Tribes are playing an ever more... 2024  
Katherine Baker, Rose Athena Collins TRUST THE PROCESS: INTERIOR PROMISES FINAL RULE WILL STREAMLINE TRIBAL TRUST LAND ACQUISITIONS 40 Practical Real Estate Lawyer 19 (Sep-24) The administrative process by which tribal nations obtain trust status for land to conduct off-reservation gaming or other activities has been criticized by some as cumbersome, lengthy, and overly burdensome. With recently implemented amendments to 25 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) part 151, the Biden Administration seeks to make this process... 2024  
Mekonnen Firew Ayano , Associate Professor, University at Buffalo School of Law, Buffalo, NY, United States, Email: mfayano@buffalo.edu UNDERSTANDING THE LOCAL COMPLEXITIES IN LAND LAW REFORMS: THE CASE OF LAND INALIENABILITY IN ETHIOPIA, 1991-2018 49 Law and Social Inquiry 2398 (November, 2024) (Received 24 July 2023; revised 15 February 2024; accepted 15 April 2024; first published online 18 September 2024) Postcolonial governments often restrict the market alienability of land rights for various policy reasons. One policy aims to treat all citizens equivalently and safeguard vulnerable social communities equally, as an unrestrained land... 2024  
Emily Campbell UNEQUAL LAND: TOWARDS FULL RECOGNITION OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE'S RELIGIOUS RIGHTS 10 Texas A&M Journal of Property Law 167 (11-Apr-24) Indigenous people face disparate treatment regarding religious free-exercise claims in the United States court system. Specifically, courts misconstrue native religious practices and hold native religious practitioners to a higher standard of proof than practitioners of mainstream religions in their free-exercise claims. This Article analyzes the... 2024  
Elena Chang WAI EA: RESTORING HAWAI'I'S PUBLIC TRUST AND RECLAIMING LAHAINA'S WATER FUTURE 46 University of Hawaii Law Review 366 (Spring, 2024) I. Introduction. 367 II. The Legacy of Plantation Disaster Capitalism in Lahaina. 375 A. The Dewatering of Lahaina's Abundant Landscape. 377 B. State-Aided Disaster Capitalism. 385 III. Restoring Hawai'i's Public Trust. 396 A. Decisionmakers Confound Balance in the Struggle to Effectuate Hawai'i's Public Trust. 397 B. Restorative Environmental... 2024  
Thomas R. Prible WALKING ON HOT COALS: USING THE INTER-AMERICAN HUMAN RIGHTS SYSTEM TO PROTECT BLACK COMMUNITIES' RIGHT TO A HEALTHY ENVIRONMENT 34 Indiana International & Comparative Law Review 379 (2024) Franky. Julia Gillespie. Cyrus. Twenty-four people with recorded names, and 152 listed simply as Female age 8 or Male age 50. They range from one to sixty years old, and they represent the known enslaved persons associated with Philip Henry Pitts and his brothers, who were cotton planters in the Black Belt region of Alabama. One of his estates,... 2024  
Kelly Bridges WATER SECURITY IN THE WAKE OF ARIZONA v. NAVAJO NATION: HOW THE PRESIDENT'S EMERGENCY POWERS CAN PROVIDE A PATH FORWARD FOR THE NAVAJO NATION 2024 University of Chicago Legal Forum 399 (2024) In 2023, the Supreme Court decided Arizona v. Navajo Nation, finding that the United States government does not have an affirmative duty to ensure the Navajo Nation's water security. The decision offers the Navajo two paths forward for relief: the tribe can either litigate specific water rights claims in the Colorado River Basin or lobby the... 2024  
Stella Emery Santana WE SHALL OVERCOME: THE EVOLUTION OF QUOTAS IN THE LAND OF THE FREE AND THE HOME OF SAMBA 47 Seattle University Law Review 1243 (Spring, 2024) C1-2Contents I. Prelude: The Synopsis of Our Journey. 1243 II. The Universal Anthem--Higher Education as a Global Human Right. 1246 III. Liberty's Quest--The American Educational Odyssey. 1251 A. Mosaic of Dreams--Quest for Equity in the U.S.. 1252 B. Chronicles of Change--America's Affirmative Journey. 1258 IV. Rhythms of Equality--from Samba to... 2024  
Ann Sarnak WHEN PUBLIC LAND LEAVES PUBLIC HANDS: VALUES EMBEDDED IN MUNICIPAL LAND DISPOSITION LAW 42 Yale Law and Policy Review 626 (Spring, 2024) In the wake of multiple economic crises, many local governments across the country have resorted to selling off their real property. At the same time, advocates and social movements are increasingly calling for municipalities to use publicly-owned land to advance spatial justice in cities--for instance, to develop affordable housing, parks, and... 2024  
Timothy Gentles WHITHER AFFIRMATIVELY FURTHERING FAIR HOUSING IN NEW YORK? THE AFFH MANDATE IN AN ERA OF LAND USE REFORM 45 Cardozo Law Review 977 (February, 2024) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 978 I. Background. 985 A. The Fair Housing Act and the Duty to Affirmatively Further Fair Housing. 985 1. History of the AFFH Mandate. 985 2. Litigation Under the AFFH Mandate. 989 B. Exclusionary Zoning and Fair Housing. 991 C. Exclusionary Zoning in New York. 995 II. Analysis of the New York AFFH Law. 996 A.... 2024  
Jackie Dugard XOLOBENI'S STRUGGLE AGAINST PATRIRACIAL-COLONOCAPITALIST MINING IN SOUTH AFRICA: A COUNTERPOINT TO CLIMATE CATASTROPHE? 41 Wisconsin International Law Journal 551 (Summer, 2024) Mining is central to the history of repression in South Africa. Mining made Sandton to be Sandton and the Bantustans of the Eastern Cape to be the desolate places that they still are. Mining in South Africa also made the elites in England rich by exploiting workers in South Africa. You cannot understand why the rural Eastern Cape is poor without... 2024  
Amy Reavis, Nora Wallace "ENTITLED TO OUR LAND": THE SETTLER COLONIAL ORIGINS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA 14 California Law Review Online 23 (June, 2023) Many may recognize the land grant moniker that several dozen U.S. universities like the University of California carry, but what many do not realize is that the land granted to fund these universities was land that the federal government had recently expropriated from Native Nations through violent seizures and coercive treaties. While... 2023  
Randall S. Abate "FOOL ME ONCE, SHAME ON YOU": PROMOTING CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY FOR THE HUMAN RIGHTS IMPACTS OF CLIMATE WASHING 18 Intercultural Human Rights Law Review 1 (2023) Effective climate change governance faces two overarching challenges. The first is mobilizing the political will to regulate climate change with sufficient ambition. Second, when regulatory measures are in place to address climate change, the next challenge is ensuring that governmental and private sector entities are on track to comply with these... 2023  
Michael B. Kent, Jr. "NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN": A CENTENNIAL RETROSPECTIVE OF PENNSYLVANIA COAL CO. v. MAHON 10 Belmont Law Review 201 (Spring, 2023) Introduction. 201 I. Context and Background. 203 A. Mining and Subsidence. 203 B. Legal Changes. 205 C. The Dispute. 206 II. The Opinions. 207 A. Justice Holmes's Majority Opinion. 207 1. The Extent of the Public Interest. 208 2. The Extent of the Taking. 210 B. Justice Brandeis's Dissenting Opinion. 211 1. Lawfully Imposed. 211 2. Not a... 2023  
William Y. Chin "WE WANT OUR LAND BACK": RETURNING LAND TO FIRST PEOPLES IN THE LAND RETURN ERA USING THE NATIVE LAND CLAIMS COMMISSION TO REVERSE CENTURIES OF LAND DISPOSSESSION 24 Scholar: St. Mary's Law Review on Race and Social Justice 335 (2023) Introduction. 337 I. The First Peoples Land Inhabitance Era. 339 II. The European Land Dispossession Era. 340 III. The American Land Dispossession Era. 342 A. The United States' Continuing Reliance on the Discovery Doctrine. 342 B. The United States' History of Unjust Land Confiscations. 343 IV. The First Peoples Land Return Era. 345 A.... 2023  
Audrey Glendenning , Martin Nie , Monte Mills (SOME) LAND BACK . SORT OF: THE TRANSFER OF FEDERAL PUBLIC LANDS TO INDIAN TRIBES SINCE 1970 63 Natural Resources Journal 200 (Summer, 2023) Federal public lands in the United States were carved from the territories of Native Nations and, in nearly every instance, required that the United States extinguish pre-existing aboriginal title. Following acquisition of these lands, the federal government pursued various strategies for them, including disposal to states and private parties,... 2023  
Juliana Vélez-Echeverri and Camila Bustos A HUMAN RIGHTS APPROACH TO CLIMATE-INDUCED DISPLACEMENT: A CASE STUDY IN CENTRAL AMERICA AND COLOMBIA 31 Michigan State International Law Review 403 (2023) The past decade was the warmest decade ever recorded. As climate impacts intensify, numbers of people displaced and in need of relocation increase. International law has yet to adapt to a changing climate and its implications for those most vulnerable. Experts still debate whether the existing refugee regime could provide a solution for those... 2023  
Clara Goodwin A TOOL TO BUILD A WORKING-CLASS ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENT: PROPOSAL FOR AN INDUSTRIAL WORKERS SAFETY ACT 72 Washington University Journal of Law & Policy 219 (2023) The consequences of climate change are far-reaching and ripple throughout various aspects of society; one such consequence is the urgent need for overhaul of systems across the energy production, transportation, and industrial manufacturing industries. Unfortunately, such system improvements run contrary to the interests of powerful, influential... 2023  
Olivia Magliozzi A WELL-FOUNDED FEAR OF THE CLIMATE: UTILIZING ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE STRUCTURES TO PROTECT CLIMATE REFUGEES 46 Suffolk Transnational Law Review 123 (Winter, 2023) An international, collective failure to mitigate climate change and protect the refugees it leaves in its wake is among the greatest threats facing humanity presently and into the future. The definition of refugee was ascribed during the Geneva Convention of 1951 (1951 Geneva Convention) during a time when climate change was unimaginable, as a... 2023  
Vanessa Racehorse , Anna Hohag ACHIEVING CLIMATE JUSTICE THROUGH LAND BACK: AN OVERVIEW OF TRIBAL DISPOSSESSION, LAND RETURN EFFORTS, AND PRACTICAL MECHANISMS FOR #LANDBACK 34 Colorado Environmental Law Journal 175 (Spring, 2023) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 176 I. History of Forcible Dispossession of Indigenous Lands. 178 A. Doctrine of Discovery, Broken Treaties, and Indian Removal. 178 B. Land Back as More than a Movement. 183 II. Correlation Between Dispossession and Climate Change. 184 A. Shifting Land Management Practices. 185 1. Historical Indigenous Practices... 2023  
Jim Rossi , J.B. Ruhl ADAPTING PRIVATE LAW FOR CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION 76 Vanderbilt Law Review 827 (April, 2023) The private law of torts, property, and contracts will and should play an important role in resolving disputes regarding how private individuals and entities respond to and manage the harms of climate change that cannot be avoided through mitigation (known in climate change policy dialogue as adaptation). While adaptation is commonly presented as... 2023  
Tiffany Canate, et al. ADVANCING ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH AND JUSTICE: A CALL FOR ASSESSMENT AND OVERSIGHT OF HEALTHCARE WASTE 53 Environmental Law 147 (Spring, 2023) Tiffany Canate , Michele Okoh , Crystal Dixon , Natalie Sampson , Kandyce Dunlap , Fatemeh Shafiei , Jay Herzmark , Lindsay Tallon , Na'Taki Osborne Jelks , Theodora Tsongas , Denise Patel , Olivia Wilson , Eric Persaud , Omega Wilson, Brenda Wilson , Vincent Martin , Kelly McLaughlin , Margarita Asiain Healthcare waste adversely impacts society in... 2023  
Kristin King-Ries ADVOCATING FOR COMMUNITY LAND TRUSTS 31 Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 365 (2023) A Brief History. 365 I. What Is a CLT, Exactly?. 370 II. If CLTs Do Not Need Legislation to Function, Why Bother? CLTs Need Legislation to Thrive. 374 III. Access to Land: New York City and a Proposed CLT Right of First Refusal. 376 IV. Enabling Legislation and Consistent Tax Policies: The Guadalupe Neighborhood Development Corporation and the... 2023  
John Leshy AMERICA'S PUBLIC LANDS: WHAT HISTORY SUGGESTS ABOUT THEIR FUTURE 34 Colorado Environmental Law Journal 1 (Winter, 2023) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 2 I. The Major Themes of Public Land Political History. 3 II. How the National Forest System Came About. 5 III. Other Land Acquisition Programs. 9 IV. Reserving the Remaining Public Lands in the 1930s. 10 V. Congress Reclaims Authority from the Executive. 13 VI. Public Land Policy from Reagan to Trump. 17 VII.... 2023  
Rebecca Dixon AMID CLIMATE DISASTERS, WORKERS DEMAND A RIGHT TO SAFETY 49 Human Rights 6 (October, 2023) Many years ago, I was a college student at home in Mississippi for the summer and in need of a temporary job. Lured by the promise of good pay, I took a job on the production line at a chicken plant. I will never forget the air, pungent with the smell of feathers and machinery. Amid the sounds of clanging metal and whirring conveyor belts, dozens... 2023  
Sidney M. Lewellen AN ARGUMENT FOR MULTI-DISTRICT CLIMATE LITIGATION 20 Indiana Health Law Review 411 (2023) Climate change is no longer an abstract problem for future generations. It is an immediate threat to human life and health, the tangible effects of which can be seen and felt around the world. The news is teeming with examples of climate disasters. In March 2022, an Antarctic ice shelf the size of Rome collapsed due to abnormally high temperatures.... 2023  
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