The second issue of JESL’s eighteenth volume (published under the Missouri Environmental Law and Policy Review) touches on a wide range of topics. The edition’s articles address energy issues stateside as well as water management abroad. The edition’s student-written notes highlight changes on the federal scene to how courts view both federal environmental statutory law as well as basic constitutional principles.
Copies of JESL’s most recently published content can be viewed by clicking the links below.
Volume 18, Issue 2, Spring 2011
Articles
Assessing the Risks and Benefits of Hydraulic Fracturing, Jesica Rivero Gilbert
A Challenge for Federalism: Achieving National Goals in the Electricity Industry, Ari Peskoe
The Nile Basin Cooperative Framework Agreement: The Beginning of the End of Egyptian Hydro-Political Hegemony, Abadir M. Ibrahim
Notes
What’s in a Label? FIFRA Regulations and the Preemption of State Tort Claims of Label Misrepresentation, Kristin R. Michael
In Closing the Door to Environmental Public Nuisance Claims, Did the Fourth Circuit Leave a Window Cracked, Katherine E. Vogt
Attempting to (De)Regulate Genetically Modified Crops: The Supreme Court Overrules the Injunction Denying Deregulation of Roundup Ready Alfalfa, Christine K. Lesicko
Stop the Beach Renourishment: Why Judicial Takings May Have Meant Taking a Little Too Much, Rachel S. Meystedt




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