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January 15, 2010

Adler on Environmental Law

Jonathan H. Adler has posted The Record of the Roberts Court in Environmental Cases: Pro-Business or Pro-Government? on SSRN with the following abstract:

Drawing upon a preliminary analysis of the Roberts Court’s decisions in environmental cases prepared for a January 2009 Santa Clara Law Review symposium on “Big Business and the Roberts Court,” this essay assesses claims that the Roberts Court has shown itself to be particularly “pro-business” and hostile to environmental protection. A review of all eighteen environmental cases decided by the Roberts Court in its first four years finds little evidence of any “pro-business” inclination. Victories for business interests are balanced by losses. The Roberts Court’s environmental decisions may provide evidence for something else, however: a tendency to side with government agencies and state interests. While there is little evidence the Roberts Court is “pro-business” or “anti-environment,” there is some evidence to suggest it is “pro-government.”  

ECC

January 15, 2010 | Permalink

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