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Archive for October, 2008

New L&C Law Scholarship: Environmental Law Review Volume 38, Issue 3

October 20th, 2008

The latest issue of Lewis & Clark Law School’s Environmental Law Review is now out.

Here are the articles published in Volume 38, Issue 3 of Environmental Law Review, complete with links to the abstracts and full-text articles:

Articles

Book Review

2007 Ninth Circuit Environmental Review

New L&C Law Scholarship is a regular feature of BoleyBlogs! Here we announce new content from the Law Reviews of Lewis & Clark Law School, along with the latest publishing ventures of our own faculty, students and staff.


Envtl. Law Review , New L&C Law Scholarship — site admin  12:47 pm 

New L&C Law Scholarship: Justice Kennedy and Ecosystem Services

October 20th, 2008

Robin Kundis Craig, Justice Kennedy and Ecosystem Services: A Functional Approach to Clean Water Act Jurisdiction after Rapanos, 38 Environmental Law Review 635 (2008)

The United States Supreme Court’s most recent-and fractured-decision regarding Clean Water Act jurisdiction, Rapanos v. United States, has been greeted with disappointment, puzzlement, and even anger. However, now that Justice Kennedy’s “significant nexus” test has emerged as the dominant test for which waters qualify as “waters of the United States,” the Court’s limitation of Clean Water Act jurisdiction may have a silver lining. Specifically, Justice Kennedy’s test forces the EPA, the Army Corps, and the courts to articulate how various waters are connected and what they are doing ecologically and for humans. As such, the test highlights the functions and ecosystem services that non navigable-in-fact waters provide, underscoring their ecological and economic value to the nation.

(abstract from Environmental Law Review)


Envtl. Law Review , New L&C Law Scholarship — site admin  12:41 pm 

New L&C Law Scholarship: Catch Me If You Can

October 20th, 2008

Ivan Lieben, Catch Me If You Can – The Misapplication of the Federal Statute of Limitations to Clean Air Act PSD Permit Program Violations, 38 Environmental Law Review 667 (2008)

The federal Clean Air Act (CAA) seeks to maintain air quality in areas already meeting tough air quality standards through the Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) permit program. New or modified major stationary sources subject to PSD who fail to obtain a permit or install stringent emission controls are subject to enforcement. Courts-including the only two circuit courts to rule on the issue-are sharply divided as to whether violations of the PSD program are one-time events or are continuing in nature for purposes of the five-year federal statute of limitations. The outcome of this judicial debate contains great import to the administration of the PSD program because the application of a one-time violation theory would result in sources escaping enforcement if they can evade detection for long enough, thus undercutting the important deterrence goals created by the enforcement provisions of the CAA. This Article argues that those courts finding PSD violations to be continuous for statute of limitations purposes are correct based upon the legislative history and the explicit provisions of the PSD program, as well as the broad remedial nature of the CAA.

(abstract from Environmental Law Review)


Envtl. Law Review , New L&C Law Scholarship — site admin  12:40 pm 

New L&C Law Scholarship: The Shifting Sands of Property Rights, Federal Railroad Grants, and Economic History

October 20th, 2008

Danaya C. Wright, The Shifting Sands of Property Rights, Federal Railroad Grants, and Economic History: Hash v. United States and the Threat to Rail-Trail Conversions, 38 Environmental Law Review 711 (2008)

This Article analyzes a Federal Circuit case from 2005 which spawned disturbing precedents in the area of federal transportation and railbanking policy. The decision renders null a number of federal statutes enacted to dispose of abandoned federally-granted railroad corridors and disrupts the important federal policy of converting abandoned rail corridors to recreational trails. By providing the legal foundation for getting the courts back on track, this Article explores the underlying policies behind federal efforts to preserve railroad corridors and promote interim trail use.

(abstract from Environmental Law Review)


Envtl. Law Review , New L&C Law Scholarship — site admin  12:38 pm 

New L&C Law Scholarship: Ossification’s Demise?

October 20th, 2008

Stephen M. Johnson, Ossification’s Demise? An Empirical Analysis of EPA Rulemaking From 2001-2005, 38 Environmental Law Review 767 (2008)

For more than a decade, academics have suggested agencies are increasingly avoiding notice and comment rulemaking because the process has become “ossified” by procedures imposed by Congress, courts, and the Executive Branch, and because the rules ultimately issued by agencies are frequently challenged. This article reviews the rules the Environmental Protection Agency issued between 2001 and 2005 to determine the validity of those criticisms.

(abstract from Environmental Law Review)


Envtl. Law Review , New L&C Law Scholarship — site admin  12:35 pm 

New L&C Law Scholarship: Nimrod: Courts, Claims, and Killing on the Oregon Frontier – A Review

October 20th, 2008

Nathaniel Suchy, Nimrod: Courts, Claims, and Killing on the Oregon Frontier – A Review, 38 Environmental Law Review 793 (2008)

(abstract from Environmental Law Review)


Envtl. Law Review , New L&C Law Scholarship — site admin  12:30 pm 

New L&C Law Scholarship: What a Long, Strange Trip It’s Been

October 20th, 2008

Tommy Tucker Henson II, What a Long, Strange Trip It’s Been: Broader Arranger Liability in the Ninth Circuit and Rethinking the Useful Product Doctrine, 38 Environmental Law Review 941 (2008)

The Ninth Circuit recently refined its conception of “arranger liability” under CERCLA to include transactions that contemplate disposal as a part of the transaction, and this “broader” arranger liability is constrained by the “useful products doctrine.” This Chapter examines the court’s current analysis and critiques the application of the analysis to the sale of secondary materials, i.e., by-products. The Chapter then argues that the court made a wrong turn in earlier cases and proposes a new analysis focusing on the disposal transaction rather than the materials subject to disposal.

(abstract from Environmental Law Review)


Envtl. Law Review , New L&C Law Scholarship — site admin  12:28 pm 

New L&C Law Scholarship: Wielding a Finely Crafted Legal Scalpel

October 20th, 2008

Carey Catherine Whitehead, Wielding a Finely Crafted Legal Scalpel: Why Courts Did Not Cause the Decline of the Pacific Northwest Timber Industry, 38 Environmental Law Review 979 (2008)

Undoubtedly, judicial decisions to protect forests and the environment sometimes result in economic consequences for individuals. But do these impacts indicate that courts have overstepped the bounds of judicial review? Did court-issued injunctions cause a decline in the timber industry? This Chapter explores that question as presented in a July 2007 Ninth Circuit decision-Lands Council v. McNair. In January 2008, the Ninth Circuit agreed to rehear the case en banc. In June 2008, after the author submitted this Chapter, the Ninth Circuit issued its en banc decision, reversing the three-judge panel. Still, the initial 2007 opinion-particularly Judge Smith?s special concurrence and Judge Ferguson’s concurring opinion written in response-holds enduring significance in the broader, ongoing discussion of the judiciary’s role in reviewing agency decision making.

(abstract from Environmental Law Review)


Envtl. Law Review , New L&C Law Scholarship — site admin  12:26 pm 

New L&C Law Scholarship: Animal Law Volume 14, Number 2

October 17th, 2008

The latest issue of Lewis & Clark Law School’s Animal Law is now out.

Here are the articles published in Volume 14, Number 2 of Animal Law, complete with links to the abstracts and full-text articles:

Articles

Comments

New L&C Law Scholarship is a regular feature of BoleyBlogs! Here we announce new content from the Law Reviews of Lewis & Clark Law School, along with the latest publishing ventures of our own faculty, students and staff.


Animal Law Review , New L&C Law Scholarship — site admin  3:40 pm 

New L&C Law Scholarship: The Japanese Dolphin Hunts

October 17th, 2008

Rachelle Adam, The Japanese Dolphin Hunts: In Quest of International Legal Protection for Small Cetaceans, 14 Animal Law 133 (2008)

This article sets out to explore the international legal status of those dolphins targeted by the Japanese drive hunts. It is estimated that over two thousand five hundred small cetaceans-dolphins, porpoises and small whales-will be killed as a result, out of a total of over twenty thousand killed annually in Japan by direct catch. It is argued that since we have literally pushed them to the brink of extinction, we have an ethical duty towards dolphins, to stop the cruelty perpetrated against them by man and to ensure the survival of their species. And our ethical duty towards them should be turned into an international legal duty together with a correlated legal right for their international protection. Inseparable from and interwoven with the absolute and devastating cruelty of these hunts and the excruciating suffering of the dolphins, are the implications from a conservationist perspective on the targeted dolphin populations. For like biodiversity worldwide, we are losing cetacean diversity it at a rapid and increasing rate. Writing this article is accompanied by a sense of futility, but also by a great sense of urgency, that if it will be too late this year to stop the carnage and the irreplaceable loss of sentient, intelligent beings who make up an irreplaceable component of Earth’s global biodiversity, action must be finally be taken by international environmental institutions to bring an end to these inhumane practices.

(abstract from Animal Law)


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