Tony Webster / Flickr By Graham Rex, F22 Environmental Clinic Student Chevron has done wonderful things to protect the environment. No, not the company Chevron—I’m talking about Chevron, the legal doctrine. Under the Chevron doctrine, courts defer to agencies’ interpretations of ambiguous statutes, so long as such interpretations are reasonable.… read more
What's New in Environmental Law
Mining after the Gold Rush
By Pleasant Garner, F22 Environmental Clinic Student Once I add a key-term to my Google Alerts, it is there forever. As a result, I stay passively apprised of my research topics of yore, even when the research is no longer relevant to my life. A search term I inputted years… read more
The Changing Face of the Legal Remedy in Environmental Justice Actions
Tim Hill / Pixabay By Beebs Hartzell, F22 Environmental Clinic Student Over the past decade, as climate activism has risen to the forefront of the national stage, there has been a correlative rise in attention to environmental justice. The goal of environmental justice, according to the EPA, is to provide… read more
America’s Foreign & Domestic Climate Migrants
John Englart / Flickr By Yuyan Pu, F22 Environmental Clinic Student The playbill for September’s political theater featured the surprising appearance of immigration amid record-breaking inflation and accelerating setbacks to reproductive rights. Taking the spotlight are Republican governors of Florida, Texas, and Arizona who have all created their respective state-funded… read more
The Future of Constitutional Standing for Environmental Citizen Suits: A Look at Environment Texas in the Fifth Circuit
Roy Luck / Flickr By Blake Welborn, F22 Environmental Clinic Student Most federal environmental statutes, such as the Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, and Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, allow individuals to sue polluters to force them into compliance with laws they may be breaking.… read more
Environmental Justice Claims in EPA’s Permitting Process: Where Are We Now?
Fred Murphy By Chloe Gossett, F22 Environmental Clinic Student All communities have the right to a fair distribution of environmental burdens and benefits. But in reality, this is not typically the case. A disproportionate amount of minority and low-income communities bear the burden of environmental hazards and are denied access… read more
Putting a Price on Climate Preparedness – The SEC’s Proposed Climate Disclosures
By Kay Goldberg, S22 Advanced Environmental Clinic Student, S21 Environmental Clinic Student The SEC’s recent rule proposal, titled “The Enhancement and Standardization of Climate-Related Disclosures for Investors,” would require publicly traded companies to provide an assessment of climate-related risks, business decisions, and emissions alongside their standard financial disclosures. The SEC… read more
COVID-19 and an Argument for Escalating Climate Activism
By Evan Kudler, Spring 2022 Environmental Clinic Student The story of the COVID-19 coming from a bat in a Chinese wet market spread almost as fast as the virus itself. While the wet market may have been the place of spillover, it is not where or how the pandemic began.… read more
Community Solar Grows as Clean Energy Transition Continues
By Bee Thompson, Spring 2022 Environmental Clinic Student On March 22, 2022, Governor Kathy Hochul announced that New York has over 1 gigawatt of installed community solar capacity, making it the first state to reach this milestone. This achievement will help the state reach its clean and renewable energy goals… read more
As Texas Border Communities Experience Drought, International Water Tensions Remain High
By Jaime Villareal, Jr., Spring 2022 Environmental Clinic Student At the intersection of environmental and international law, lies the Rio Grande in Deep South Texas. For many, the Rio Grande Valley, or simply the RGV, – the southernmost region of Texas named after the 1,885-mile river that divides the United… read more









