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The need for environmental protection is all around: air and water pollution; severe weather; sea level rise; loss of species, wetlands, glaciers and biodiversity; water and food shortages; disease and pandemics; and food and water insecurity. It's also close at hand: the water from the tap; the local air quality index; local land use and development; flooding and storm damage. There are also constant reminders, as young people demand, and future generations deserve, continued vigilance in the face of environmental challenges and the climate crisis. Modern Environmental Law is a current…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The need for environmental protection is all around: air and water pollution; severe weather; sea level rise; loss of species, wetlands, glaciers and biodiversity; water and food shortages; disease and pandemics; and food and water insecurity. It's also close at hand: the water from the tap; the local air quality index; local land use and development; flooding and storm damage. There are also constant reminders, as young people demand, and future generations deserve, continued vigilance in the face of environmental challenges and the climate crisis. Modern Environmental Law is a current casebook that examines signature federal, state, international and global laws, including common law and public trust, the National Environmental Policy Act, the Endangered Species Act, the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act, climate change, environmental rights, water rights, international environmental law, and environmental justice. The contents are torn from the headlines, including recent decisions from the 2021-2022 and 2022-23 Terms of the United States Supreme Court (e.g., West Virginia v. EPA; Sackett v. EPA, etc.). The casebook also integrates many related concepts, including separation of powers, federalism and individual rights, and interacts with other areas of law, including constitutional law, administrative law, property and civil procedure, and land use law.
Autorenporträt
James R. May, Esq. is Distinguished Professor of Law and Founder of the Global Environmental Rights Institute at Widener University Delaware Law School, and former Chief Sustainability Officer and Presidential cabinet member at Widener University. In 1996 he brought among the first lawsuits to enforce Pennsylvania's Green Amendment and has assisted efforts to recognize environmental rights in Maryland, Delaware and elsewhere in the U.S. and multiple countries globally. May has published extensively about environmental, constitutional and human rights law, including Principles of Constitutional Environmental Law (American Bar Association, Environmental Law Institute). He has also published widely about Environmental Human Rights, including Environmental Constitutionalism (Edward Elgar 2014), Global Environmental Constitutionalism (Cambridge 2015), Implementing Environmental Constitutionalism (Cambridge 2018), the Encyclopedia of Human Rights and the Environment (Edward Elgar 2019), Environmental Rights, the Development of Standards (Cambridge 2020), and Environmental Human Rights and the Anthropocene (Cambridge 2023). May spearheaded the effort that led to the American Bar Association adopting a resolution to advance environmental justice in 2021, and currently serves as the Special Legal Advisor to the American Bar Association Task Force on Environmental Justice. He is an inducted member of Phi Kappa Phi and the American College of Environmental Lawyers. He is a recipient of the Robinson Environmental Law Award at Haub School of Law at Pace University, the Chair's Award from the American Bar Association Section of Environment, Energy and Resources, and the Distinguished Alumni Award from the University of Kansas School of Law. He is the four-time recipient of the Douglas E. Ray Scholarship Award and the former H. Albert Young Awardee in Constitutional Law at Widener University Delaware Law. He has received awards from the Sierra Club and the American Canoe Association for his legal advocacy as a federal litigator working pro bono to enforce the nation's environmental and natural resources laws and has been twice recognized by LawDragon as one of the world's leading environmental lawyers. May's bio: https://delawarelaw.widener.edu/current-students/faculty-directory/faculty/122