Faculty Scholarship on Environmental Law
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Each of the following UCLA School of Law faculty publications is available online by following the appropriate link. (Please note that some of these links are to draft versions rather than final published versions.)
To review the complete bibliographies for UCLA's environmental law faculty members, please follow the link from the name of the faculty member, then click the "bibliography" link from the professor's faculty profile page.
Professor Ann Carlson:
Iterative Federalism and Climate Change (forthcoming, Northwestern University Law Review, 2008).
Implementing Greenhouse Gas Emissions Caps: A Case Study of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, 55 UCLA L. Rev. 1479 (2008).
Heat Waves, Global Warming, and Mitigation. 26 UCLA J. Envtl. L. & Pol. 169 (2008).
California Motor Vehicle Standards and Federalism: Lessons for the European Union. Institute of Governmental Studies Paper WP2008-4 (2008).
Classifying Social Norms, in The Jurisdynamics of Environmental Protection: Change and the Pragmatic Voice in Environmental Law (edited by James Chen, Washington, DC: Environmental Law Institute, 2003).
Federalism, Preemption and Greenhouse Gas Emissions, 37 U.C. Davis Law Review 281-319 (2003).
Recycling Norms, 89 California Law Review 1231-1300 (2001).
Professor Timothy Malloy:
Of Natmats, Terrorists, and Toxics: Regulatory Adaptation in a Changing World. 26 UCLA J. Envtl. L. & Pol. 93 (2008).
Pollution Prevention as a Regulatory Tool in California: Breaking Barriers and Building Bridges (with Peter Sinsheimer). UCLA/Frankel Environmental Law Working Paper No.1 (October, 2001).
Professor Kal Raustiala:
Nonstate Actors in the Global Climate Regime, in the edited volume International Relations of Global Climate Change (forthcoming MIT Press 2008) (with Natalie Bridgeman).
Toward a Post-Kyoto Climate Change Architecture: a Political Analysis. Discussion Paper 2008-01, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements, July 2008 (with Robert Keohane).
The Regime Complex for Plant Genetic Resources (with David Victor), 58 International Organization 277-310 (2004).
International Law, International Relations, and Compliance (with Anne-Marie Slaughter), in The Handbook of International Relations (edited by Walter Carlnaes, Thomas Risse and Beth Simmons, Thousand Oaks, CA, London: Sage Publications, Ltd., 2002).
Professor Jonathan Zasloff:
The Judicial Carbon Tax: Reconstructing Public Nuisance and Climate Change, 55 UCLA L. Review 1827 (2008).
Taking Politics Seriously: A Theory of California’s Separation of Powers, 51 UCLA Law Review 1079-1150 (2004).
Professor Sean Hecht:
Climate Change and the Transformation of Risk: Insurance Matters, 55 UCLA Law Review 1559 (2008).
Limiting Liability in the Greenhouse: Insurance Risk-Management Strategies in the Context of Global Climate Change (with C. Ross and E. Mills), 43A Stanford Journal of International Law 251 (2007) and 26A Stanford Environmental Law Journal 251 (2007).
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