Vol. 155 No. 6, June 2007
Index
- Scientific challenges in the attribution of harm to human influence on climate.
- Global climate change control: is there a better strategy than reducing greenhouse gas emissions?
- Timing and form of federal regulation: the case of climate change.
- Harmonizing regulatory and litigation approaches to climate change mitigation: incorporating tradable emissions offsets into common law remedies.
- Basic compensation for victims of climate change.
- Allocating responsibility for the failure of global warming policies.
- Climate change and animals.
- Negligence in the air: the duty of care in climate change litigation.
- Climate change, insurability of large-scale disasters, and the emerging liability challenge.
- The case for a sustainable climate policy: why costs and benefits must be temporally balanced.
- Corrective justice and liability for global warming.
- Reasonable emissions of greenhouse gases: efficient abatement for a stock pollutant.
- Insurability of damage caused by climate change: a commentary.
- Desperately seeking numbers: global warming, species loss, and the use and abuse of quantification in climate change policy analysis.
- Climate change and international human rights litigation: a critical appraisal.
- Liability for climate change: the benefits, the costs, and the transaction costs.
- Legal liability as climate change policy.
- Think globally, act globally: the limits of local climate policies.
- Unraveling the global warming regime complex: competitive entrophy in the regulation of the global public good.