Print Articles

Harvard Environmental Law Review Print Articles Fearful Asymmetry: How the Absence of Public Participation in Section 7 of the ESA Can Make the “Best Available Science” Unavailable for Judicial Review July 12, 2015 by Harvard Law Development By Travis O. Brandon Recent empirical studies have shown that public participation is an essential part of the … Read more

Online Forum

Harvard Environmental Law Review Online Forum 2021 Print Symposium: Environmental Justice – submissions closed January 28, 2021 by pdaniels Submissions are now closed for Volume 45, Issue 2, our symposium issue on environmental justice. We look forward to publishing our symposium issue later this year. … [Read more…] about 2021 Print Symposium: Environmental Justice – … Read more

HELR Online

Harvard Environmental Law Review HELR Online Judging a Book by its Cover: The Tension between Evidentiary Gatekeeping and Compensatory Theories of Tort November 24, 2016 by By Julie Amadeo, J.D. 2016, New York University School of Law. This article has been adapted from a larger work. I. Introduction Human minds are primed to jump to … Read more

HELR Online

Harvard Environmental Law Review HELR Online [ELRS] Climate Change Regulation Through Litigation: New York’s Investigation of ExxonMobil under the Martin Act March 5, 2017 by By Chris Erickson, Junior Editor–Michigan Journal of Environmental and Administrative Law at University of Michigan Law School. This post is part of the Environmental Law Review Syndicate. Click here to … Read more

HELR Online

Harvard Environmental Law Review HELR Online Opportunities to Address Climate Change in the Next Farm Bill November 10, 2017 by By Sara Dewey,[1] Liz Hanson,[2] & Claire Horan[3] This post is part of the Environmental Law Review Syndicate.  Introduction The Farm Bill affects nearly every aspect of agriculture and forestry in the United States. Therefore, its … Read more

HELR Online

Harvard Environmental Law Review HELR Online Finding the Match in the Haystack Before it Lights Up the West Again: Congress to Create a Wildfire Commission April 14, 2018 by By Kelly Brantzi*  This post is part of the Environmental Law Review Syndicate. The original post is linked here. Introduction The summer of 2017 set the West … Read more

HELR Online

Harvard Environmental Law Review HELR Online Going Green: The Federal Reserve’s Legal Authority to Combat Climate Change April 11, 2020 by gglovin By Matthew Razzano Twenty years ago, a deputy governor of the Bank of England (“BOE”) remarked that “a successful central bank should be boring.” Yet in an age of globalization and interconnectedness, successful … Read more

HELR Online

Harvard Environmental Law Review HELR Online The Origins of Federal Wildlife Regulation Under the Commerce Clause March 11, 2021 by pdaniels by Kathryn E. Kovacs, Professor, Rutgers Law School, The State University of New Jersey. ©Kathryn E. Kovacs 2021. This post is part of the Environmental Law Review Syndicate.   June 8, 2020, marked the eightieth … Read more

HELR Online

Harvard Environmental Law Review HELR Online Win or Hidden Hurdle?: A Critical Analysis of County of Maui v. Hawaii Wildlife Fund (2020) December 29, 2021 by jolinski by: Vanessa Daza Castillo View pdf here Introduction County of Maui v. Hawaii Wildlife Fund[1] is being vaunted as “the Clean Water Act case of the century”[2] and … Read more

HELR Online

Harvard Environmental Law Review HELR Online Taking On “Now We’re Cooking with Gas”: How a Health-First Approach to Gas Stove Pollution Could Unlock Building Electrification August 29, 2022 by shunt Aaron Regunberg View pdf here 1. Introduction It is no secret that segments of the climate and environmental justice movements sometimes find themselves in tension. … Read more