Making Sense of Extraterritoriality: Why California’s Progressive Global Warming and Animal Welfare Legislation Does Not Violate the Dormant Commerce Clause

Harvard Environmental Law Review Making Sense of Extraterritoriality: Why California’s Progressive Global Warming and Animal Welfare Legislation Does Not Violate the Dormant Commerce Clause July 12, 2015 by Harvard Law Development By Jeffrey M. Schmitt The dormant Commerce Clause’s extraterritoriality doctrine has long baffled courts and legal scholars. Rather than attempt to make sense of … Read more

HELR Volume 39, Issue 2 Available Online!

Harvard Environmental Law Review HELR Volume 39, Issue 2 Available Online! July 12, 2015 by Harvard Law Development We are pleased to present our online readership with Issue 2 of the 39th Volume of the Harvard Environmental Law Review. The latest issue of ELR begins with a detailed examination of the interagency consultation process under the Endangered Species … Read more

Foreign Impacts and Climate Change

Harvard Environmental Law Review Foreign Impacts and Climate Change July 12, 2015 by Harvard Law Development By Arden Rowell U.S. administrative agencies now routinely base domestic regulatory decisions upon the expected global impacts of carbon dioxide emissions. This is a startling divergence from traditional regulatory practice, which had been to entirely exclude foreign impacts from … Read more

Humpback whales and herring gull – David Baake

Harvard Environmental Law Review Humpback whales and herring gull – David Baake July 12, 2015 by Harvard Law Development Leave a Comment Reader Interactions This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. Primary Sidebar Search the site … Subscribe to the HELR blog via email Click here to subscribe! … Read more

Fearful Asymmetry: How the Absence of Public Participation in Section 7 of the ESA Can Make the “Best Available Science” Unavailable for Judicial Review

Harvard Environmental Law Review 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 listing process … Read more

Black Balsam Knob

Harvard Environmental Law Review Black Balsam Knob July 12, 2015 by Harvard Law Development Leave a Comment Reader Interactions This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. Primary Sidebar Search the site … Subscribe to the HELR blog via email Click here to subscribe! Contact US To contact the Harvard … Read more

CTS Corp. v. Waldburger

Harvard Environmental Law Review CTS Corp. v. Waldburger July 12, 2015 by Harvard Law Development By Michael Barclay Cite as: Michael Barclay, CTS Corp. v. Waldburger, 39 Harv. Envtl. L. Rev. 567 (2015). View Full Article (PDF) Filed Under: Print Articles, Student Comment Primary Sidebar Search the site … Subscribe to the HELR blog via email … Read more

StateLibQld_2_185639_Circus_moving_by_train_somwhere_in_Queensland,_1920s[1]

Harvard Environmental Law Review StateLibQld_2_185639_Circus_moving_by_train_somwhere_in_Queensland,_1920s[1] June 3, 2015 by Harvard Law Development Leave a Comment Reader Interactions This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. Primary Sidebar Search the site … Subscribe to the HELR blog via email Click here to subscribe! Contact US To contact the Harvard Environmental Law … Read more

Jumbo-Sized Mouseholes: Comforting Thoughts on the Clean Power Plan, Part II

Harvard Environmental Law Review Jumbo-Sized Mouseholes: Comforting Thoughts on the Clean Power Plan, Part II June 3, 2015 by Harvard Law Development Elephant on a circus train This summer, the Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) is expected to promulgate the final version of its Clean Power Plan, a set of regulations aimed at decreasing the carbon … Read more

What, Me Worry? Comforting Thoughts on the Clean Power Plan, Part I

Harvard Environmental Law Review What, Me Worry? Comforting Thoughts on the Clean Power Plan, Part I May 27, 2015 by Harvard Law Development This summer, the Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) is expected to promulgate the final version of its Clean Power Plan, a set of regulations aimed at decreasing the carbon dioxide (“CO2”) emissions of … Read more