The Vanderbilt Law Review has published its November issue (Volume 65, Number 6), which is the Law Review’s Symposium issue, currently available online. The Vanderbilt Law Review, the Vanderbilt Energy, Environment and Land Use Program, and the Vanderbilt Climate Change Research Network hosted the Symposium, “Supply and Demand: Barriers to a New Energy Future,” at Vanderbilt Law School on February 24, 2012.
Hard copies of the journal should be available within two to three weeks. The articles included in this issue are:
- Michael P. Vandenbergh, J.B. Ruhl & Jim Rossi, Symposium: Introduction, 65 Vanderbilt Law Review 1447 (2012).
- Robert H. Socolow, Truths We Must Tell Ourselves to Manage Climate Change, 65 Vanderbilt Law Review 1455 (2012).
- Daniel A. Farber, Sustainable Consumption, Energy Policy, and Individual Well-Being, 65 Vanderbilt Law Review 1479 (2012).
- Michael P. Vandenbergh & Jim Rossi, Good for You, Bad for Us: The Financial Disincentive for Net Demand Reduction, 65 Vanderbilt Law Review 1527 (2012).
- Katrina Fischer Kuh, Personal Environmental Information: The Promise and Perils of the Emerging Capacity to Identify Individual Environmental Harms, 65 Vanderbilt Law Review 1565 (2012).
- Noah M. Sachs, Can We Regulate Our Way to Energy Efficiency? Product Standards as Climate Policy, 65 Vanderbilt Law Review 1631 (2012).
- Uma Outka, Environmental Law and Fossil Fuels: Barriers to Renewable Energy, 65 Vanderbilt Law Review 1679 (2012).
- Dan Tarlock, Hydro Law and the Future of Hydroelectric Power Generation in the United States, 65 Vanderbilt Law Review 1723 (2012).
- J.B. Ruhl, Harmonizing Commercial Wind Power and the Endangered Species Act Through Administrative Reform, 65 Vanderbilt Law Review 1769 (2012).
- Alexandra B. Klass & Elizabeth J. Wilson, Interstate Transmission Challenges for Renewable Energy: A Federalism Mismatch, 65 Vanderbilt Law Review 1801 (2012).
- Sara C. Bronin, Building-Related Renewable Energy and the Case of 360 State Street, 65 Vanderbilt Law Review 1875 (2012).
Interested in writing an online response to one of these pieces? Contact Senior En Banc Editor Matthew Chiarizio.