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New York University School of Law

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  • Home
  • Masthead
    • 2024-2025 Masthead
    • Masthead Archive
  • Issues
    • Volume 33
    • Volume 32
    • Volume 31
    • Volume 30
    • Volume 29
    • Volume 28
    • Volume 27
    • Volume 26
    • Volume 25
    • Volume 24
    • Older Issues
  • Symposia
    • 2024 Symposium: Our Toxic Food System: Perspectives on Pesticides and Pathways to Change
    • 2023 Symposium: Building Effective, Sustainable, and Equitable Infrastructure.
    • 2022 Symposium: Free the Land—Land Tenure and Stewardship Reimagined
    • 2020 Symposium: Covid-19 and Environmental Justice
    • 2018 Symposium: Energy and Environmental Policy
    • Fall 2017 Symposium: Tackling Traffic
    • Spring 2017 Symposium: Green Cities
    • 2016 Symposium: Prosecuting International Wildlife Trafficking
    • 2015 Symposium: American Gas Exports
    • 2014 Symposium: The Utility Industry of the Future
    • 2013 Symposium: The Business and Law of Renewable Energy Finance
  • Contact
    • Submissions
    • Subscriptions
  • Environmental Law Review Syndicate
  • Environmental Law Review Syndicate - Scholarship

    ELRS Post: Week of December 19, 2016

    December 19, 2016 - By ELJME

    This week’s post is The Legislative History of the National Park Service’s Conservation and Nonimpairment Mandate.  It was written by Caitlin Brown, a 3L at Berkeley Law and Co-Editor in Chief of Ecology Law Quarterly.  Read the post here.

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  • Environmental Law Review Syndicate - Scholarship

    The Legislative History of the National Park Service’s Conservation and Nonimpairment Mandate

    December 19, 2016 - By ELJME

    By Caitlin Brown Caitlin Brown is a 3L at Berkeley Law and Co-Editor in Chief of Ecology Law Quarterly.   This post is part of the Environmental Law Review Syndicate (ELRS).  Read the original at Ecology Law Quarterly’s website.  Introduction The National Park Service manages over 84 million acres of land divided between 413 different sites, and in 2015 alone,…

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  • Environmental Law Review Syndicate - Scholarship

    ELRS Post: Week of December 12, 2016

    December 12, 2016 - By ELJME

    Read within: Our Money Is Safe, But The Planet Is Not: How The Carbon Bubble Will Cause Havoc For The Environment, But Not The Stock Market.  This week’s article was written by Breanna Hayes, Managing Editor of Vermont Journal of Environmental Law.    

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  • Environmental Law Review Syndicate - Scholarship

    Our Money Is Safe, But The Planet is Not: How The Carbon Bubble Will Cause Havoc For The Environment, But Not The Stock Market

    December 12, 2016 - By ELJME

    By Breanna Hayes, Managing Editor, Vermont Journal of Environmental Law. This post is part of the Environmental Law Review Syndicate. I. Introduction Human use of fossil fuels dates back to prehistoric times.[1]  Before the Industrial Revolution, humans mostly relied on wood, wind, and water as energy sources.[2]  But as the Industrial Revolution progressed, humans developed a dependence on fossil fuels.[3] …

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  • Environmental Law Review Syndicate - Scholarship

    ELRS Post: Week of November 28, 2016

    November 28, 2016 - By ELJME

    This week’s post, The Importance of GIS in Emergency Management, was written by Monika Holser, UCLA School of Law, Class of 2018.  Read it here.

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  • Environmental Law Review Syndicate - Scholarship

    The Importance of GIS in Emergency Management

    November 28, 2016 - By ELJME

    By Monika Holser, UCLA School of Law, Class of 2018 This post is part of the Environmental Law Review Syndicate. Read the original here and leave a comment. GIS (geographic information system) is a computer system for “capturing, storing, checking, and displaying data related to positions on the Earth’s surface.”[1]  It allows multiple layers of information to be displayed at…

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  • Environmental Law Review Syndicate - Scholarship

    ELRS Post: Week of November 21, 2016

    November 19, 2016 - By ELJME

    This week’s post was written by NYU ELJ’s very own Julie Amadeo, J.D. 2016! Read her post, Judging a Book by its Cover:  The Tension between Evidentiary Gatekeeping and Compensatory Theories of Tort.  

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  • Environmental Law Review Syndicate - Scholarship

    Judging a Book by its Cover: The Tension between Evidentiary Gatekeeping and Compensatory Theories of Tort

    November 19, 2016 - By ELJME

    By Julie Amadeo, J.D. 2016, New York University School of Law  This article has been adapted from a larger work.   This post is part of the Environmental Law Review Syndicate. I. Introduction Human minds are primed to jump to conclusions. Call them intuitions, or things we just know, our ability to draw conclusions is a survival instinct, developed over…

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  • Environmental Law Review Syndicate - Scholarship

    ELRS Post: Week of November 14, 2016

    November 13, 2016 - By ELJME

    This week’s post, Constitutions & the Environment: Comparative Approaches to Environmental Protection and the Struggle to Translate Rights into Enforcement, was written by Kyle Burns, J.D. Candidate (2017) at University of Virginia School of Law.   Read the post here.

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  • Environmental Law Review Syndicate - Scholarship

    Constitutions & the Environment: Comparative Approaches to Environmental Protection and the Struggle to Translate Rights into Enforcement

    November 13, 2016 - By ELJME

    Kyle Burns* This post is part of the Environmental Law Review Syndicate. Read the original here and leave a comment. Introduction Every nation around the world faces ecological hardships. Almost every nation has responded with a legal regime that attempts to ensure environmental protection. These environmental law schemes come in various forms. Some nations place environmental protection at the highest…

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