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Academic Journals
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From:Environmental Law (Vol. 51, Issue 2)Ocean renewable energy (ORE) technologies, such as wind, waves, and biomass harvesting, have rapidly advanced and are proliferating around the world. This Article considers whether existing Law of the Sea sufficiently...
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From:Environmental Law (Vol. 51, Issue 2)Wilderness is vanishing. Despite explicit legislative protection of wilderness values for over half a century, rapid environmental degradation worldwide in recent decades has severely diminished the extent and quality of...
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From:Environmental Law (Vol. 51, Issue 2)The public trust doctrine imposes obligations and restrictions on governments in their exercise of sovereign power over property and resources of great public value. For environmental plaintiffs alleging that the federal...
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From:Environmental Law (Vol. 51, Issue 2)This Comment discusses the benefits of the continuing evolution of a smarter electricity grid and how to overcome the negative effects these advancements will have on privacy. Ensuring both utilities and consumers can...
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From:Environmental Law (Vol. 51, Issue 2)The past decade has been the warmest in history. But while there has been a great deal of attention paid to infrastructure sustainability issues, less attention has been focused on the impact of climate change on our...
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From:Environmental Law (Vol. 51, Issue 2)Assembling large tracts of property in the for-profit and nonprofit sectors can offer a bigger opportunity than any one parcel could offer on its own. But even though for-profit developers regularly aggregate plots over...
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From:Environmental Law (Vol. 51, Issue 2)What we now call Portland, Oregon, and Multnomah County are the traditional lands of the Multnomah, Wasco, Cowlitz, Kathlamet, Clackamas, Bands of Chinook, Tualatin, Kalapuya, Molalla, and many other tribes who made...