The Complicated Equities of Localized Energy
Environmental Law Prof Blog
by Environmental Law Prof
4M ago
This post is cross-posted at Legal Planet. For many decades, most people in the United States have obtained their electricity from a large investor-owned utility company (IOU). They had no real choice. Much of U.S. energy law was built on ..read more
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Accessioning Joy
Environmental Law Prof Blog
by Environmental Law Prof
5M ago
We need your help, and it should be fun. But first, some scene setting. It is summer 2023, but it could be last summer, or the next, or the one after that. People are dying in droves from unprecedented heat ..read more
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Inequity, Excess Commercialization, and Overconsumption in the Anthropocene: Two Very Modest Regulatory Proposals
Environmental Law Prof Blog
by Environmental Law Prof
6M ago
Scottish author Alistair McIntosh, reflecting on the climate challenge that our communities collectively face, sagely wrote in “Where Now ‘Hell and High Water’?” that “consumerism is a false satisifier—just another form of addiction that masks the emptiness.” He called upon ..read more
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What Is the Good Life in the Anthropocene?
Environmental Law Prof Blog
by Environmental Law Prof
6M ago
The End of the Good Life In July 2023, twenty environmental law professors gathered beside the Hood River in Oregon to discuss patterns of consumption and how humanity can move forward in this time of polycrisis to have the benefits ..read more
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Breaking Our Consumption Addictions
Environmental Law Prof Blog
by Environmental Law Prof
6M ago
Americans are addicted. We see this all around us. Our addictions range from the pleasurable but mostly innocuous (coffee and caffeine) to more concerning on a society-wide scale (think overeating and obesity) to the pathological and clearly harmful (such as ..read more
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"Green Colonialism"
Environmental Law Prof Blog
by Environmental Law Prof
6M ago
In 1972, a group of MIT economists published The Limits to Growth, a study that used computer models to analyze the future of our planet under twelve possible scenarios. In the 50 years since the book’s publication, the authors’ “business-as-usual ..read more
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Consumption All the Way Down
Environmental Law Prof Blog
by Environmental Law Prof
6M ago
Anthropogenic change on Earth is occurring on a scale never seen before. Mounting evidence shows that humans are pushing the planet beyond its systems capacities due to growth of production, consumption, and population. To understand Earth’s systems, and to develop ..read more
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Rationalizing Water Consumption in the United States: Hydrogeological Reality vs. The Constitutional Right to Travel
Environmental Law Prof Blog
by Environmental Law Prof
6M ago
Human consumption of water imposes externalities on planetary systems, and at all scales. Globally, for example, human impoundments of surface water in reservoirs account for a significant fraction of observed polar drift and have shrunk day length by a few ..read more
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Eating Cheetos in the Anthropocene: Governing the Good Life at a "Whole of Consumption" Scale
Environmental Law Prof Blog
by Environmental Law Prof
6M ago
Cheetos are undeniably yummy—so much so that I walk quickly past their section in the grocery snacks aisle, eyes locked on the cart. It’s not a pretty picture once I succumb and rip open a bag, the Puffs being my ..read more
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Imagining Climate Havens in a Boiling World
Environmental Law Prof Blog
by Environmental Law Prof
6M ago
These blogs seek to conceptualize what the good life means in a consumption-obsessed, planetary-boundary constrained era. Here we suggest that cities and towns are our epicenters for imagining what a good-life means in an era where climate change increasingly determines ..read more
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