Sarah KrakoffTribes, Land, and the Environment
Herausgeber: Rosser, Ezra
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Ezra Rosser is an Associate Professor at American University Washington College of Law and a research affiliate of the National Poverty Center at the University of Michigan. His areas of research and teaching include federal Indian law, property law, poverty law, and housing law.
Contents: Introduction, Sarah A. Krakoff and Ezra Rosser; Towards a trust
we can trust: the role of the trust doctrine in the management of tribal
natural resources, Alex Tallchief Skibine; Part I Tribal Sovereignty and
Environmental Impacts: Control and accountability: the twin dimensions of
tribal sovereignty necessary to achieve environmental justice for Native
America, James M. Grijalva; The climate crisis, the renewable energy
revolution, and tribal sovereignty, Dean B. Suagee; Application of
environmental justice to climate change-related claims brought by native
nations, Elizabeth Ann Kronk. Part II Tribal Lands: The promise and perils
of renewable energy on tribal lands, Sara C. Bronin; At the margins: border
tribes' struggles to protect Reservation lands, waters, and communities,
Allison M. Dussias. Part III Tribal Environmental Protection: Co-operating
to protect the Shining Big Sea Water and its siblings: consultation with
Native peoples in protecting the Great Lakes, Jacqueline Phelan Hand;
Tribes as conservation easement holders: is a partial property interest
better than none?, Jessica Owley. Part IV Tribal realism and Case Studies:
Natural allies: conservationists, Indian tribes, and protecting Native
North America, Kirsten Matoy Carlson and Robert T. Coulter; The role of
Indigenous custom in environmental governance: lessons from the
inter-American human rights system, Ghislain Otis; Index.