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Genetic Susceptibility and Environmental Risk Assessment: An Emerging Link

Since the 1970s, the federal government has imposed progressively stringent regulations on the discharge of hazardous and toxic substances into the air, water, and soil in order to protect the public from the presumed health risks of exposure to these pollutants.1 The acceptance of the precautionary principle by Congress and the courts in the 1970s has led the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and other agencies to base toxic pollutant standards on risk assessments. The use of risk assessments has been criticized from many perspectives.

Environmental Law Slogans for the New Millennium

Contrary to the bleakest predictions offered by environmental fatalists during the latter half of the 1900s, humanity and much of the plant and animal kingdom survived New Year's Eve 1999. Similarly, contrary to the dire warnings of industrial organizations and lobbyists that overburdening environmental regulations would spell the end of profitable, American capitalism, the year 2000 dawned in the United States with the world's most extensive array of antipollution and pro-conservation measures regulating the globe's most impressive economic engines.

The Coral Reef Task Force: Protecting the Environment Through Executive Order

Coral reefs are some of the most biologically diverse and economically productive ecosystems in the world, and there are approximately 4.2 million acres of coral reefs within the jurisdiction of the United States,1 located off the coasts of Florida, Hawaii, Texas, Louisiana, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa, and various other American-held islands in the South Pacific.2 However, most of these reefs are suffering from environmental degradation.

Environmental Insurance: An Introduction for the Environmental Attorney and Risk Manager

In the past decade, environmental insurance has evolved into uniquely different applications. Coverages have broadened, new products have been introduced, and premiums have decreased. Over the last few years, such insurance has also received greater attention from attorneys, their business clients, and corporate risk managers. This Dialogue will discuss the types of environmental coverages generally available and guide the practitioner and risk manager through the intricacies of these specialized policies and coverage concepts.

Legal Considerations in Voluntary Corporate Environmental Reporting

Formal corporate environmental reports—voluntary periodic communication by companies of information about their environmental activities and performance in a single document generally analogous to an annual report—began to appear at the end of the 1980s.1 By 1995, over 100 Fortune 500 companies issued formal environmental reports.2 Some companies embrace these reports as a useful internal management tool and external stakeholder communication vehicle.

Land Use Regulation and Environmental Justice

Environmental justice has emerged as a major environmental law issue with almost no corresponding attention to the role that land use law can play in addressing environmental injustice or to the role that environmental justice will play in shaping land use law.1 This Article explores the relationship between environmental justice and land use regulation and planning—a relationship that lawyers, scholars, judges, and policymakers must increasingly understand.

Delisting Endangered Species: An Aspirational Goal, Not a Realistic Expectation

On March 11, 1967, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) promulgated the first formal list of U.S. endangered species.1 Since then, the protection afforded listed species by federal law has increased dramatically. In light of those expanded protections, one might have expected both the number of protected species and the length of time those species spend on the list to gradually decline. But that has not been the case. Instead, the list has grown explosively over the past 30 years; today it includes more than 1,200 U.S.