UCLA Journal of Environmental Law & Policy - 2009
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- Climate change action in Arizona.
- Law and norms in collective action: maximizing social influence to minimize carbon emissions.
- Massachusetts takes on climate change.
- Climate change action in Connecticut: linking energy, the environment and the economy.
- Challenges and opportunities for regulating greenhouse gas emissions at the state, regional and local level.
- Organophosphates, friend and foe: the promise of medical monitoring for farm workers and their families.
- Foreword.
- California's climate change program: lessons for the nation.
- The changing climate of cooperative federalism: the dynamic role of the states in a national strategy to combat climate change.
- Captain planet takes on hazard transfer: combining the forces of market, legal and ethical decisionmaking to reduce toxic exports.
- Strength in numbers: setting quantitative criteria for listing species under the Endangered Species Act.
- The essential role of state enforcement in the brave new world of greenhouse gas emission limits.
- Not all carbon credits are created equal: the constitution and the cost of regional cap-and-trade market linkage.
- The role of Illinois and the Midwest in responding to the challenges of climate change.
- A Colorado perspective: the new energy economy.
- SB 375: promise, compromise and the new urban landscape.
- Constitutional implications of regional C(O.sub.2) cap-and-trade programs: the northeast regional greenhouse gas initiative as a case in point.
- Shortcomings of the Cartagena Protocol: resolving the liability loophole at an international level.