ENVI 307(F) Environmental Law (Same as Political Science 317)
We rely on environmental laws to make human communities healthier and protect the natural world, while allowing for sustainable economic growth. Yet, despite 40 years of increasingly varied and complex legislation, balancing human needs and environmental quality has never been harder than it is today.
Environmental Studies 307 analyzes the transformation of environmental law from fringe enterprise to fundamental feature of modern political, economic and social life. ENVI 307 also addresses the role of community activism in environmental law, from local battles over proposed industrial facilities to national campaigns for improved corporate citizenship.
By the completion of the semester, students will understand both the successes and failures of modern environmental law and how these laws are being reinvented, through innovations like pollution credit trading and "green product" certification, to confront globalization, climate change and other emerging threats.
Format: Seminar, with guest lecturers. Student-selected mid-term paper, final exam and several brief papers on individual readings.
Prerequisites: Political Science 201 and Environmental Studies 101. No enrollment limit (expected: 15).
This course satisfies the "Environmental Policy" requirement for the Environmental Studies concentration.
Satisfies one semester of the Division II requirement.

Hour: GALLAY