Books - Law - Environmental & Natural Resources Law

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  • Environmental & Natural Resources Law
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    $30.02
    1. Oil and Gas Law in a Nutshell,
    $14.93
    2. Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the
    $37.88
    3. Environmental Law: Examples &
    $33.60
    4. Environmental Law in a Nutshell,
    $133.65
    5. Environmental Regulation: Law,
    $37.57
    6. Emanuel Law Outlines: Environmental
    $16.97
    7. Down to the Wire: Confronting
    $59.66
    8. Failure to Learn The BP Texas
    $17.95
    9. The Polluters: The Making of Our
    $62.91
    10. Animal Law: Cases and Materials
    $79.11
    11. Environmental Law Handbook
    $101.20
    12. Environmental Health and Safety
    $29.95
    13. Smart Grid: Modernizing Electric
    $15.30
    14. Messages from Franks Landing:
    $45.12
    15. Environmental Law and Policy,
    $21.73
    16. Global Environmental Governance:
    $130.88
    17. Employment Law (4th Edition)
    $32.84
    18. Energy Law in a Nutshell (Nutshell
    $41.40
    19. Selected Environmental Law Statutes,
    $41.61
    20. Living with the Earth, Third Edition:

    1. Oil and Gas Law in a Nutshell, 5th Edition (Nutshell Series)
    by John S. Lowe
    Paperback
    list price: $35.00 -- our price: $30.02
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    Isbn: 031418497X
    Publisher: West
    Sales Rank: 78958
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    Editorial Review

    This authoritative coverage focuses on the legal rules that govern the development of privately owned mineral rights, which often also apply to governmentally owned resources. Text covers topics such as the nature, protection, and conveying of oil and gas rights, leasing, and taxation. ... Read more


    2. Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature
    Paperback
    list price: $21.95 -- our price: $14.93
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    Isbn: 0393315118
    Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
    Sales Rank: 127795
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    Editorial Review

    A controversial, timely reassessment of theenvironmentalist agenda by outstandinghistorians, scientists, and critics.In a lead essay that powerfully states the broad argument of the book, William Cronon writes that the environmentalist goal of wilderness preservation is conceptually and politically wrongheaded. Among the ironies and entanglements resulting from this goal are the sale of nature in our malls through the Nature Company, and the disputes between working people and environmentalists over spotted owls and other objects of species preservation.

    The problem is that we haven't learned to live responsibly in nature. The environmentalist aim of legislating humans out of the wilderness is no solution. People, Cronon argues, are inextricably tied to nature, whether they live in cities or countryside. Rather than attempt to exclude humans, environmental advocates should help us learn to live in some sustainable relationship with nature. It is our home. Photographs
    ... Read more


    3. Environmental Law: Examples & Explanations 5e
    by Steven Ferrey
    Paperback
    list price: $45.95 -- our price: $37.88
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    Isbn: 0735588732
    Publisher: Aspen Publishers
    Sales Rank: 290022
    Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars Same Book, Cheaper Price, September 20, 2010
    Nothing beats saving money on the exact same book than buying it in the law school bookstore. Book shipped right away. ... Read more


    4. Environmental Law in a Nutshell, 8th (Nutshell Series)
    by Daniel A. Farber
    Paperback
    list price: $35.00 -- our price: $33.60
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    Isbn: 0314233563
    Publisher: West
    Sales Rank: 213350
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    Editorial Review

    Findley and Farber's Environmental Law in a Nutshell provides a foundation for understanding environmental law. Expert text includes coverage of various areas, from acid rain and atomic energy, to waste disposal and wetlands. Touches upon the many statutory and common-law regulations shaping the world in which we live. ... Read more


    5. Environmental Regulation: Law, Science, and Policy, Sixth Edition
    by Christopher H. Schroeder, Alan S. Miller, James P. Leape Robert V. Percival
    Hardcover
    list price: $165.00 -- our price: $133.65
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    Isbn: 0735584621
    Publisher: Wolters Kluwer Law & Business
    Sales Rank: 51179
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    Editorial Review

    <p>As the Obama administration and the courts change the course of federal environmental law and policy, this best-selling casebook has been updated comprehensively to include the latest legal and policy developments. Each chapter includes new material exploring contemporary developments including the challenges climate change is posing to nearly every aspect of environmental law.</p><p><b>The revised Sixth Edition includes:</b></p><ul><li><b>Ten New Case Excerpts</b>, including new decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court on CERCLA, the Clean Air Act, NEPA, environmental standing and the Clean Water Act</li><li><b>Four New Problem Exercises,</b> including exercises on cap-and-trade versus a carbon tax, the application of NEPA to climate change, who should be prosecuted for criminal violations, and negotiation of a post-Kyoto regime to control greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions</li><li><b>"Midnight Regulations" </b>by the Bush administration and the Obama administration's response</li><li><b>New emphasis on Environmental Standing</b>, including the Supreme Court's Massachusetts v. EPA and Summers v. Earth Island Institute decisions</li><li><b>The new approach to CERCLA "arranger" liability and apportionment </b>embodied in the Supreme Court's Burlington Northern decision</li><li><b>EPA's new definition of "solid waste" and judicial decisions altering the agency's new source review program and programs for controlling interstate air pollution and hazardous air pollutants </b></li><li><b>EPA's Clean Air Act "Endangerment" Finding for Emissions of GHGs, reversal of the California waiver denial, and California's controls on GHG emissions from mobile sources </b></li><li><b>The relationship between the Clean Water Act's §404 and §402 permit programs</b> , including the Supreme Court's June 22, 2009 Coeur Alaska decision</li><li><b>Climate Change and NEPA</b>, including the 9th Circuit's Center for Biological Diversity v. NHTSA decision on the environmental impact of national fuel economy standards</li><li><b>Remedies for Claims of NEPA Violations</b>, including the Supreme Court's Winter v. NRDC decision</li><li><b>Climate change and the Endangered Species Act</b>, including the impact of the polar bear listing on agency consultation under §7 and §9's prohibition of "takes"</li><li><b>The latest scientific evidence concerning global warming and climate change, as well as material on the development of carbon trading markets, adaptation strategies, and carbon disclosure</b></li></ul><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p> ... Read more


    6. Emanuel Law Outlines: Environmental Law
    by Linda A. Malone
    Paperback
    list price: $40.95 -- our price: $37.57
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    Isbn: 0735562954
    Publisher: Aspen Publishers, Inc.
    Sales Rank: 367940
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    Editorial Review

    <p><b>The most trusted name in law school outlines</b>, <i>Emanuel Law Outlines</i> support your class preparation, provide reference for your outline creation, and supply a comprehensive breakdown of topic matter for your entire study process. Created by Steven Emanuel, these course outlines have been relied on by generations of law students. Each title includes both capsule and detailed versions of the critical issues and key topics you must know to master the course. Also included are exam questions with model answers, an alpha-list of cases, and a cross reference table of cases for all of the leading casebooks.</p><p><b>Emanuel Law Outline Features:</b></p><ul><li>1 outline choice among law student</li><li>Comprehensive review of all major topics</li><li>Capsule summary of all topics</li><li>Cross-reference table of cases</li><li>Time-saving format</li><li>Great for exam prep</li></ul><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p> ... Read more


    7. Down to the Wire: Confronting Climate Collapse
    by David W. Orr
    Hardcover
    list price: $19.95 -- our price: $16.97
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    Isbn: 0195393538
    Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
    Sales Rank: 85659
    Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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    Editorial Review

    "The real fault line in American politics is not between liberals and conservatives.... It is, rather, in how we orient ourselves to the generations to come who will bear the consequences, for better and for worse, of our actions."

    So writes David Orr in Down to the Wire, a sober and eloquent assessment of climate destabilization and an urgent call to action. Orr describes how political negligence, an economy based on the insatiable consumption of trivial goods, and a disdain for the well-being of future generations have brought us to the tipping point that biologist Edward O. Wilson calls "the bottleneck." Due to our refusal to live within natural limits, we now face a long emergency of rising temperatures, rising sea-levels, and a host of other related problems that will increasingly undermine human civilization. Climate destabilization to which we are already committed will change everything, and to those betting on quick technological fixes or minor adjustments to the way we live now, Down to the Wire is a major wake-up call. But this is not a doomsday book. Orr offers a wide range of pragmatic, far-reaching proposals--some of which have already been adopted by the Obama administration--for how we might reconnect public policy with rigorous science, bring our economy into alignment with ecological realities, and begin to regard ourselves as planetary trustees for future generations. He offers inspiring real-life examples of people already responding to the major threat to our future.

    An exacting analysis of where we are in terms of climate change, how we got here, and what we must now do, Down to the Wire is essential reading for those wanting to join in the Great Work of our generation.
    ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars A must-read whatever your opinion, January 1, 2010
    Dr. David Orr is a university professor, trustee of a major environmental group called the Bioneers, and a participant in the Presidential Climate Action Project, which proposed global warming policies to the incoming Obama administration. In this book, he presents a case that our present form of society is doomed. Either we change it ourselves, or it will be extinguished by the stresses of climate change. Dr. Orr devotes his book to advocating the former, and to discussing how it might be done.

    The scope of Dr Orr's thinking is quite impressive, to put it mildly. Readers of this book can expect numerous provocative references to writings in the fields of science, philosophy, law, government, religion, psychology, economics, ethics, history and political science. Dr. Orr discusses the ideas of a wide range of thinkers, from Deuteronomy to eighteenth-century English conservative Edmund Burke to the latest from the scientists working on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The list of sources at the back of the book is more than twenty pages long, and each is referenced somewhere in the body of the book. Dr. Orr locates the source of our troubles not with the greed of modern capitalists, but with the shortcomings of the Enlightenment philosophers and their predecessors; he singles out Francis Bacon, Rene Descartes, and Galileo, who, despite their great accomplishments, taught us to man is separate from nature, that mind is separate from body, and that whatever cannot be counted doesn't count(123, 147).

    Dr. Orr begins his case with the assertion that we should have started working on climate change thirty years ago. We did not, and now we have used up our margin of safety. We have to cut carbon emissions 90 percent by 2050, and there is no time to lose.
    I don't know enough science to know whether Dr. Orr is right about our margin. But I do know that a large number of the scientists doing climate change work agree with his sense of urgency. Anyone is free to disagree, of course. But those who do so need to be aware of the risks they are taking with posterity's lives. If we keep on merrily producing greenhouse gases, and the scientists turn out to have been right, we will have gambled and lost on the biggest bet in human history.

    So, if we take the prudent course and commit to the changes needed to avoid climate disaster, Dr. Orr has a lot to say to us. He unequivocally denounces the gospel of economic growth (31), points out that corporations have no interest in the long-term future (36), and observes that we have no system of governance adequate to the tasks presented by climate change. (35)
    He demolishes, at length and in detail, the mindset that treats climate change as a technical problem amenable to technical fixes. The buildup of dangerous concentrations of pollutants in the atmosphere is only one symptom among many; the others include our unwillingness to provide a living for millions of people (politely termed 'poverty'), greed, war, and the whole familiar panoply of social failings. He argues that all of these point to a fundamental failure of our model of civilization (160)
    He calls for decentralized production of food and energy (175) and for democratic decisionmaking (63-67)
    He has not the slightest confidence that corporations can play a constructive role without active government guidance. He calls on us to rein in their power and reminds us that the grant of a corporate charter comes with an expectation that the public interest will be served (208).
    He thinks global capitalism is headed for history's ash heap, alongside communism, and calls on us to develop a better alternative.
    He advocates the idea of the rights of posterity, a concept which has no standing in current law, and calls for a Constitutional amendment to protect it (72-76, 208)
    He features extensive, and terrifying, descriptions of what climate change would really mean (17-21, 182-184)
    Dr. Orr calls - not surprisingly - for better leadership, and opens his third chapter with extended discussions of Lincoln's leadership during the Civil War and Franklin Roosevelt's Hundred Days. The essential thing about Lincoln's transformative leadership, according to Dr. Orr, is that he held close to fundamental principles (slavery is wrong, the Constitution and the nation must be preserved) and sought to achieve healing and unity rather than demonizing his opponents. He understood that slavery was the fundamental issue of the day, taking priority over all others (tariffs, growth, etc). In that spirit, Dr. Orr calls on leaders to eschew sugar coatings, happy talk, and other forms of condescension, and to pay the public the compliment of assuming it can handle the truth.
    His real faith, however, is in the grass roots, and he closes his book with stories of how local governments, universities, churches and citizens' groups are taking the lead in developing new economies.

    Dr. Orr aims to provoke with this book, and he succeeds. His tone can be off-putting, his assumptions may not be entirely correct. But for anyone who has ever wondered whether business-as-usual is really sustainable in the face of modern problems, he provides an abundance of ideas about how we might order human affairs differently. For those who want to take action against climate change, he provides encouragement and inspiration by example. He makes a case that might lead to despair, but calls us to heed our better angels and overcome the most monumental challenge in history.

    4-0 out of 5 stars If there was only one book on climate change, would I pick this one?, January 31, 2010
    If there were only one book on climate change, would I pick this one?

    No. But not because there is anything wrong with its content. I don't have any complaints about the material, except to say Orr hasn't written this book for Joe and Jane Public. Trust me. This is not a book for those who enjoy American Idol's preliminary screenings!

    David Orr says climate change is coming. This is not news, since every (and I mean EVERY) professional scientific organization, from the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) to the American Geophysical Union (AGU), agrees that the climate is out of wack, and getting weirder. There are many popular books that say this as well.

    Orr's book is more of a... complaint? Work on the issue faster and harder? Take it more seriously? Blame Bush and the industries in bed with the petro-companies?

    His writing style, and this book, is not for the Outdoor Life crowd. It is more for the Atlantic Monthly crowd. And since it, in many places, is critical of that same crowd, what is Orr expecting? "The 'American way of life' is thought to be sacrosanct. In the face of a global emergency, brought on in no small way by the profligate American way of life, few are willing to say otherwise. So we are told to buy hybrid cars, but not asked to walk, bike, or make fewer trips, even at the end of the ear of cheap oil. we are asked to buy compact fluorescent light bulbs, but not to turn off our electronic stuff or avoid buying it in the first place. We are admonished to buy green, but seldom asked to buy less or repair what we already have or just do without. We are encouraged to build LEED-rated buildings that are used for maybe ten hours a day for five days a week, but we are not asked to repair existing buildings or told that we cannot build our way out of the mess we've made. We are not told that the consumer way of life will have to be rethought and redesigned to exist within the limits of natural systems. And so we continue to walk north on that southbound train" (p. 186-187).

    "We are now engaged in a global conversation about the issues of human longevity on Earth, but no national leader has yet done what Lincoln did for slavery and placed the issue of sustainability in its larger moral context. It is still commonly regarded, here and elsewhere, as one of many issues on a long and growing list, not as the linchpin that connects all of the other issues" (p. 88).

    This depends on who you talk to, of course. If you are talking to the Deer Hunting with Jesus crowd, or the Dittohead crowd, there's no conversation even on a local level. In the US, global warming is not considered an issue by the millions of poor (although it will certainly affect the poor), and seemingly only a fund-raising opportunity for the right-wing political pundits (who milk this cow very successfully). Prius owners may think they speak for the trees, but for the tens of millions on government assistance, or in need of assistance, they are simply considered owners of an elite car. By the way, I don't own a Prius, but I did buy a used Civic Hybrid, as well as an ultra-low emission conventional gas car. I normally bike, bus, or carpool to work (except car-free Fridays... no cars).

    What else does Orr claim?

    "There is no simple remedy for public apathy, carelessness, ignorance, or meanness, but there is a steep price to be paid if such qualities become the national character. ...Whether or not we have reached the level of farce or tragedy, it is clear that the press is no longer the alert watchman it once may have been and that it no longer plays the role the founders thought necessary for a healthy democracy" (p. 61). The New York Times and the Washington Post don't play this role? This seems to be an indictment of the broader issue of "dumbing down" the news. Thank you, FOX Broadcasting!

    "It is clear by now that we have seriously underestimated the magnitude and speed of the human destruction of nature, but we seem powerless to stop it" (p. 122). Agreed. Why? "We tend... to see things that are large and fast but not those that are small and slow. It is harder for us to see and to properly fear long-term trends, such as soil erosion over centuries or the nearly invisible disappearance of species. ... We know, too, that we are prone to deny uncomfortable realities at both the personal level and the societal level" (p. 163).

    "A great deal now depends on what we do to develop the stamina, vision, and institutional resources necessary to carry the best of civilization through to the other side" (p. 160). And who defines "the best of civilization"?

    "What do I propose? Simply this: that those who purport to lead us, and all of us who are concerned about climate change, environmental quality, and equity, treat the public as intelligent adults who are capable of understanding the truth and acting creatively and courageously in the face of necessity - much as a doctor talking to a patient with a potentially terminal disease" (p. 189).


    So, if I can sum up Orr's message, it is these sixteen words: "We need to do something about climate change. Now. All of us. Leaders and leadership welcome."

    I expect to be dinged for, of all things, not giving Orr's book five stars. So it goes. However, it's worth the paper it is printed on (and the carbon it took to produce) IF some readers don't use it as another justification why, with their Prius, they can commute to their work 40 miles away everyday (and 40 miles back) and think they are doing what it takes to solve the climate crisis, IF local, state, and national leaders find their backbones, or IF every reader, every day, does SOMETHING to support a sustainable world. I believe Orr would pass this test. I think I do. But there are millions of people who listen to talk show hosts every day repeating the mantra that the climate change crowd is unAmerican. Somehow, I don't think Orr's book has an answer to that. And I wish it did.

    5-0 out of 5 stars dauntless inspiration, October 26, 2009
    David Orr is the Moses of our times. I have read all the books he has written since discovering him a year ago at the Bioneers conference in San Rafael. In DOWN TO THE WIRE, he critiques cultural and constitutional history bedrocked by current scientific research aided by incisive analysis and steered by a faith that unerringly speaks truth to power and calls out the best in us. Words fail me in describing his erudition, expertise, and ineffable determination to stand up for life and for all of us and our children and all future generations of humans and all our relations on this exquisite planet. David Orr's newest book should be on the Christmas list for all those who care about and support life.

    5-0 out of 5 stars A top pick for any science or social issues collection, December 17, 2009
    Down to the Wire: Confronting Climate Change comes from one of the founders of the Presidential Climate Action Project and advocates that individual steps to change won't solve the problems looming upon us. His is a realistic look at how the world is and what will need to be done to fix it: it advocates leadership at the government level and is a top pick for any science or social issues collection.

    4-0 out of 5 stars After the Race, March 5, 2010
    David Orr is one of my gurus, but the first time I read this book I was disappointed by its repetitiousness, vagueness, lack of sequential structure or sustained, fully supported and defended claims, and its preaching to the choir, who have already heard most of this many times. The central points were hardly controversial or new for us, but still unacceptable to the great majority of citizens who are looking more than ever at short term rescues or pleasures. For that reason the urgency and insistence of the tone seemed irritating and disrespectful of the audience. Compared to his last book, Design on the Edge, which contained a fascinating autobiographical narrative and a detailed account of the remarkable history of the building he was responsible for planning, designing and financing at Oberlin College, this book felt vague, uninspired, and sentimental. What does it mean after all to insist that what we should do is "deepen our humanity." (202)

    I also found it sadly dated. Though filled with topical references to the impending Obama adminstration, the events of the fifteen months since his inauguration made many of the proposals about transforming governance and launching a revolution in Washington seem painfully overoptimistic. Nevertheless I decided to give it another try, either to be able to articulate specifically what I found wrong with the book or to give it a more sympathetic and engaged reading.

    First, I confirmed what I suspected about the book's process of composition. Most of the material here was previously published in the form of essays that Orr writes for the journal Conservation Biology and others. Many of these can be found at the website, [...]. That accounted for and in a way justified the sense that each chapter recovered much of the same territory and started from scratch rather than building on what preceded. Viewed from this perspective, each chapter had the coherence and scope of his remarkable speeches, such as the one I heard at the organizing conference for Focus the Nation in Las Vegas <[...]>And even when general points were repeated, Orr seemed in each essay to summon up different examples and sources.

    A second reading also revealed an overall structure of chapters that moved forward from beginning to middle and end despite the backtracking. Preface and Introduction both state the predicament and his solutions. We are facing what has been called a long emergency or a bottleneck, a worldwide period of crisis brought on by the environmental degradation and climate change that misguided human impacts have produced over the last 200 years. The way out will be long and arduous, and only possible with strong, transformative leadership, primarily in the presidency but also at all levels of government and society. Leaders have three leading tasks: move the citizenry out of a state of denial to a recognition of the dangers, develop energy policies that reverse our dependence on carbon and promote renewables, and foster a deepening of public morality emphasizing fairness, compassion, nonviolence and a sense of purpose and reverence for nature grounded in appreciation and gratitude.

    These three mandates are reaffirmed throughout the book.
    The three chapters of section I, Politics and Governance, assert that Government is the only agency strong enough to effectively address the emergency but that government needs to be transformed. Chapter 1, Governance, asserts that the challenges of mitigating and adapting to climate change and its associated catastrophes can be faced by reversing the trend toward unregulated corporate power, trivialized and ineffective journalism, excessive consumerism and rule by lobbyists. This can be done by redistribution of wealth and privilege, publicly funded elections, smartening land use and agricultural policy, promoting universal access to communication media and promotion of small community autonomy. But first government itself must be transformed from its present corrupt and dysfunctional state to a just, effective and elevating one. This will have to be accomplished through a mechanism like a new Constitutional Convention and the establishment of a new consensus.

    Chapter 2 is a meditation on democracy, the form of government most likely to succeed despite its faults, the failures of its alternatives, like natural capitalism, and unregulated free-market capitalism, and the proposal of a legal, constitutional framework for instituting the kinds of social transformation needed to address climate change based on the new idea of the legal standing of future generations.

    Chapter 3, Leadership in the Long Emergency, compares today's crisis with those faced by Lincoln and Roosevelt, and concludes that Obama can learn leadership lessons from both his great predecessors, which include the necessity of understanding and framing those crises both as legal-constitutional issues requiring preservation of law and tradition and as moral issues requiring deep personal insight and unshaken commitment. Orr repeats the laundry list of reforms mentioned earlier that Obama needs to accomplish. Chapter 4, Leadership, defines true leadership, like that of those predecessors, as the capacity to energize and give direction to the populace.

    Part II, Connections, is transitional in the overall structure of the book, but provides a sample of some of Orr's strongest qualities as a writer, manifested when he lets a more imaginative, associative principle guide his design. Chapter 5, The Carbon Connection, juxtaposes two powerful narrative descriptions: nature's devastation of humans in New Orleans by Katrina, presumably caused by climate change, and humans' devastation of nature in Coal Companies' mountaintop removal, causing climate change. This is connected to Chapter 6, The Spirit of Connection, which explores spiritual and religious perspectives on Climate Change, differentiating the apocalyptic fundamentalism that both affirms and brings it on with the subjective experiences of wonder, reverence and gratitude for the gift of life that provide meaning and hope for those struggling to protect it.

    Part III, Farther Horizons, contains three chapters overlapping earlier chapters and one another in content. Chapter 7, Milennial Hope, lists factors blocking us from taking the steps necessary to confront and deal with the coming crisis and solutions, psychological, political, and spiritual, concluding with a story of Gandhian non-violence displayed by Amish toward a mass murderer who shot a number of their children. Chapter 8, Hope at the End of our Tether, expands the emphasis on anti-militarism, Gandhian Satyagraha and other Gandhian principles like anti-materialism--shift from wealth to happiness--social justice, and localism.

    The final chapter, The Upshot: What is to be Done? echoes both Aldo Leopold and Lenin, verbally in the titles of two of their well known works, and thematically in calling for the creation of a community that includes natural beings and systems and in calling for a total revolution to be initiated by a vanguard of leaders, giving direction and energy to an awakened populace. The first section covering the same ground as the preceding chapters, this chapter and section ends with a powerful vision of a desireable outcome from the long emergency only ten years in the future, located in his home town of Oberlin Ohio, where the very specific programs he has set in motion as an activist and educator have run their course. The vision is startlingly similar to the kinds of programs and visions activists at Cal Poly and in San Luis Obispo County have dedicated themselves. More than anything in this book, these few pages (212-215) provide some of the grounds for hope that present conditions don't encourage in regard to most of the books larger recommendations.

    "Postscript: A Disclosure" is vintage Orr. It's a recollection of the extraordinarily hot summer of 1980 when he and his brother worked like slaves on a farm in Arkansas, as the temperature reached 111 degrees and stayed there. It was then that he became interested in climate change. He says he felt it viscerally, the memory recorded in his body. That's why it's presented as a disclosure. But the impact of that memory, I'm afraid is unlikely to be felt until the rest of us consistently experience such nasty conditions, and by then it's likely to be too late.

    Taking issue:

    "leadership"--is Obama like Lincoln and Roosevelt, sticking to the moral vision, keeping legal and constitutional integrity at the fore, reaching the people?

    Seemed so at inauguration, but less so now, largely because of loss of confidence resultant from bailouts and compromises, failure to seize the opportunity with courage--e.g. Copenhagen

    The long emergency--less perceivable now than in 2006, when much of this was written and when Katrina and An Inconvenient Truth and IPCC and oil spike converged to shake people up.

    Non-violence, Satyagraha--true, and a manifestation of deeper humanity, but desperation is less likely to bring it to the fore, especially when the rulers and perpetrators are becoming more brazen

    Coupling peace, justice and sustainability has advantages but also makes any progress seem hopeless, because it will leave so much undone.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Leadership Emergency, March 14, 2010
    Orr provides an eye-opening case for the selfish role our governments play. We now have matured enough at citizens to realize the great havoc we raise on a planet doomed by our indulgences and failure to heed ecological warnings. We must assume responsibility of our planets maintenance, not for our political pride or correctness, but for our very existence.

    In chapter eight, titled What Is to Be Done?, Orr calls upon leaders to lead the world into balance with nature to curtail a catastrophe from global warming. He outlines the political manifestation of the problem and proposes five challenges. Each involves the willingness of leaders to refrain from selfish pride and acknowledge that a problem exists. The lives jeopardized by climate change and rising sea levels are not hundreds of thousands--as in the Indonesian tsunami that killed 230,000--but rather in the hundreds of millions of people worldwide who reside in low-lying cities. Still, many policy makers sit on the sidelines and pretend our environmental issues will simply disappear.

    I praise people like David Orr, who are brave enough to lay it all out in clear English: wake up, people! We are out of time. //Down to the Wire// is a book everyone must read.

    Reviewed by D. Wayne Dworsky

    5-0 out of 5 stars Shocking....but...., October 15, 2009
    Your new book is TERRIFYING

    or

    (depending on one's level of faith)

    M-O-T-I-V-A-T-I-N=G!!


    Sign me up!


    I'm READY!

    1-0 out of 5 stars Bush Derangement Syndrome, August 27, 2010
    I expected a scientific treatise of the evidence for global warming as a hypothesis. What I found was 200 plus pages of Bush bashing and Obama worship.

    Yes, the paradigm of endless growth can no longer be sustained in a world of limited and rapidly dwindling resourses. But devolving into mindless bleating about whose fault it is solves nothing. Neither does blind hero worship.

    Example: "In the election of 2008, the majority of Americans decided that the country could not run indefinitely on debt, mendacity and incompetence." Perhaps the author was actually refering to the election of 2010? Such is the danger of placing your hope in a Prince and not a process.

    A much more complete work would be Confronting Collapse by Ruppert or for climate specific info, The Weather Makers by Flannery. Both offer more logic and less vitriol.

    1-0 out of 5 stars Whining and pontificating, February 19, 2010
    I've been reading a lot of books on climate change, trying to nail down what is known about it and how to deal with it. This is by far the most tedious and pretentious. The part that deals with the subject can't add up to 5%; the rest is grumping about the many things the author doesn't like. The part that does relate is no different from what former VP Gore said more clearly. This author, like Mr. Gore, snivels at real solutions. Here's what he says is the solution:

    "So, what does a carbon neutral society and increasingly sustainable society look like? My list consists of communities with:

    Front porches
    Public parks
    Local businesses
    Windmills and solar collectors
    Living machines to process waste water
    Local farms and better food
    More and better woodlots and forests
    Summer jobs for kids doing useful things
    Local employment
    More bike trails
    Summer baseball leagues
    Community theaters
    Better poetry
    Neighborhood book discussion groups
    Leagues in which no one bowls alone
    Better schools
    Vibrant and robust downtowns with sidewalk cafes
    Great pubs serving microbrews
    Fewer freeways, shopping malls, sprawl, and television
    More kids playing outdoors
    No more wars for oil or access to other peoples' resources."

    What about food for 7 billion people and more? Sanitation, housing, and education in impoverished countries? Supplying clean drinking water to a billion people who don't have it? Opportunities for young people who don't have them? Safe urban environments arranged to keep rural and forest lands open and natural?

    A book on climate change should be more than the self-indulgent musings of an environmental-studies professor. ... Read more


    8. Failure to Learn The BP Texas City Refinery Disaster
    by Andrew Hopkins
    Paperback
    list price: $60.00 -- our price: $59.66
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 1921322446
    Publisher: CCH Australia
    Sales Rank: 380698
    Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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    Editorial Review

    In Failure to Learn: The BP Texas City Refinery Disaster, respected OHS expert Professor Andrew Hopkins discusses the causes of a major explosion at the Texas City Oil Refinery on March 23, 2005, that killed 15 workers and injured more than 170 others. Failure to Learn also analyses the similarities between this event and the Longford Gas Plant explosion in Victoria in 1998, featured in his earlier book Lessons from Longford.Professor Andrew Hopkins is being recognized by the European Process Safety Centre in October 2008, in recognition of his contribution to safety. Professor Hopkins is the first winner to receive the award, outside of Europe, which is a demonstration of the impact of his valuable work worldwide.Andrew has been awarded a prize by the European Process Safety Centre for "extraordinary contribution to process safety", the first time this has been awarded outside of Europe. He also appears in the US Chemical Safety Board film on Texas City and has been invited to appear in a subsequent film.Professor Hopkins poses questions such as:Why was the number of victims so large?Who was blamed for the explosion?What were the real causes?Had lessons been learnt from the earlier incident at Longford?Has anything changed as a result of the Texas City accident?The foreword for the book was written by Carolyn Merritt, chair of the CSB at the time of the accident and subsequent inquiry. ... Read more


    9. The Polluters: The Making of Our Chemically Altered Environment
    by Benjamin Ross, Steven Amter
    Hardcover
    list price: $27.95 -- our price: $17.95
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    Isbn: 0199739951
    Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
    Sales Rank: 82799
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    Editorial Review

    The chemical pollution that irrevocably damages today's environment is, although many would like us to believe otherwise, the legacy of conscious choices made long ago. During the years before and just after World War II, discoveries like leaded gasoline and DDT came to market, creating new hazards even as the expansion and mechanization of industry exacerbated old ones. Dangers still felt today--smog, pesticides, lead, chromium, chlorinated solvents, asbestos, even global warming--were already recognized by chemists, engineers, doctors, and business managers of that era. A few courageous individuals spoke out without compromise, but still more ignored scientific truth in pursuit of money and prestige.

    The Polluters reveals at last the crucial decisions that allowed environmental issues to be trumped by political agendas. It spotlights the leaders of the chemical industry and describes how they applied their economic and political power to prevent the creation of an effective system of environmental regulation. Research was slanted, unwelcome discoveries were suppressed, and friendly experts were placed in positions of influence, as science was subverted to serve the interests of business. The story of The Polluters is one that needs to be told, an unflinching depiction of the onslaught of chemical pollution and the chemical industry's unwillingness to face up to its devastating effects.
    ... Read more


    10. Animal Law: Cases and Materials
    by Bruce A. Wagman, Sonia S. Waisman, Pamela D. Frasch
    Hardcover
    list price: $80.00 -- our price: $62.91
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 1594606722
    Publisher: Carolina Academic Press
    Sales Rank: 80628
    Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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    Editorial Review

    The fourth edition of the premier book on animal law covers a rapidly developing field that is exponentially increasing its presence in both the public eye and on the list of desired classes for law students. In the past fifteen years, the number of animal law classes in American law schools has gone from less than ten to more than one hundred, and this casebook has been used as a model for courses internationally. Animal law is, in its simplest (and broadest) sense, a combination of statutory and decisional law in which the nature legal, social, or biological of non-human animals is an important factor. This new edition of Animal Law: Cases and Materials contains significant reorganization and updating while continuing to present a cohesive format that touches on many areas in which animals affect legal doctrines, caselaw, and legislative direction. Because animal law is not a traditional legal field, the book is largely framed according to traditional legal headings such as tort, contract, criminal, and constitutional law. Each chapter sets out cases and commentary where animal law is developing its own doctrine. In this fourth edition, the text has been updated and several chapters reorganized and revised to provide even greater clarity than in earlier editions. An important chapter on the commercial use of animals, introduced in the third edition, has been updated with more recent cases and statutory developments covering the significant areas of agriculture and biomedical research. ... Read more


    11. Environmental Law Handbook
    by Daniel M. Steinway
    Hardcover
    list price: $99.00 -- our price: $79.11
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 1605902780
    Publisher: Government Institutes
    Sales Rank: 176151
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    Editorial Review

    The environmental field and its regulations have evolved significantly since Congress passed the first environmental law in 1970, and the Environmental Law Handbook, published just three years later, has been indispensable to students and professionals ever since. The authors provide clear and accessible explanations, expert legal insight into new and evolving regulations, and reliable compliance and management guidance.Thirty-six years later, the Environmental Law Handbook continues to provide individuals across the country-professionals, professors, and students-with a comprehensive, up-to-date, and easy-to-read look at the 14 major environmental, health, and safety laws affecting U.S. businesses and organizations. Because it is written by 15 of the country's leading environmental law firms, you receive the best, most reliable guidance anywhere. Both professional environmental managers and students aspiring to careers in environmental management should keep the Environmental Law Handbook within arm's reach for thoughtful answers to regulatory questions like: - How do I ensure compliance with the regulations?- ... Read more


    12. Environmental Health and Safety Audits
    by Lawrence B. Cahill
    Hardcover
    list price: $127.00 -- our price: $101.20
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0865878250
    Publisher: Government Institutes
    Sales Rank: 127489
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    Editorial Review

    This expanded edition of Environmental Health and Safety Audits brings you up-to-date on changes in EPA and OSHA auditing policies, issues currently confronting auditing programs, and state-of-the-art strategies for managing and conducting audits.The author discusses new developments in information generation and availability, including new chapters on meeting ISO 14000 auditing guidelines, auditing dilemmas, and auditing tips. He also includes new tools for building a successful audit program. Those tools include seven model program stages: EH&S audit program manual, pre-audit questionnaire, pre-audit checklist, EH&S audit opening conference presentation, environmental audit report, EH&S audit appraisal questionnaire, and management report. ... Read more


    13. Smart Grid: Modernizing Electric Power Transmission and Distribution; Energy Independence, Storage and Security; Energy Independence and Security Act of ... and Resiliency; Integra (Government Series)
    by Stan Mark Kaplan, Fred Sissine
    Paperback
    list price: $29.95 -- our price: $29.95
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 1587331624
    Publisher: TheCapitol.Net, Inc.
    Sales Rank: 248139
    Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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    Editorial Review

    "Smart Grid: Modernizing Electric Power Transmission and Distribution; Energy Independence, Storage and Security; Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA); Improving Electrical Grid Efficiency, Communication, Reliability, and Resiliency; Integrating New and Renewable Energy Sources," part of the Government Series from TheCapitol.Net

    The electric grid delivers electricity from points of generation to consumers, and the electricity delivery network functions via two primary systems: the transmission system and the distribution system.

    The transmission system delivers electricity from power plants to distribution substations, while the distribution system delivers electricity from distribution substations to consumers.

    The grid also encompasses myriads of local area networks that use distributed energy resources to serve local loads and/or to meet specific application requirements for remote power, municipal or district power, premium power, and critical loads protection.

    The concept of a "smart grid" lacks a standard definition but centers on the use of advanced technology to increase the reliability and efficiency of the electric grid, from generation to transmission to distribution.

    The move to a smart grid is a move from a centralized, producer-controlled network to one that is less centralized and more consumer-interactive.

    • Enables informed participation by consumers
    • Accommodates all generation and storage options
    • Enables new products, markets, and services
    • Provides the power quality for the range of needs
    • Optimizes asset utilization and operating efficiency
    • Operates resiliently to disturbances, attacks, and disasters

    The Department of Energy, Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability is charged with orchestrating the modernization of the nation's electrical grid. The office's multi-agency Smart Grid Task Force is responsible for coordinating standards development, guiding research and development projects, and reconciling the agendas of a wide range of stakeholders, including utilities, technology providers, researchers, policymakers, and consumers.

    The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), has been charged under the Energy Independence and Security Act (P.L. 110-140, Dec. 19, 2007) with identifying and evaluating existing standards, measurement methods, technologies, and other support services to Smart Grid adoption.

    28 Chapters, over 600 pages.

    Complete Table of Contents at www.1626SmartGrid.com

    ... Read more

    14. Messages from Franks Landing: A Story Of Salmon, Treaties, And The Indian Way
    by Charles F. Wilkinson
    Paperback
    list price: $22.50 -- our price: $15.30
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0295985933
    Publisher: University of Washington Press
    Sales Rank: 275463
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    Editorial Review

    In 1974 Federal Judge George H. Boldt issued one of the most sweeping rulings in the history of the Pacific Northwest, affirming the treaty rights of Northwest tribal fishermen and allocating to them 50 percent of the harvestable catch of salmon and steelhead. Among the Indians testifying in Judge Boldt’s courtroom were Nisqually tribal leader Billy Frank, Jr., and his 95-year-old father, whose six acres along the Nisqually River, known as Frank’s Landing, had been targeted for years by state game wardens in the so-called Fish Wars.

    By the 1960s the Landing had become a focal point for the assertion of tribal treaty rights in the Northwest. It also lay at the moral center of the tribal sovereignty movement nationally. The confrontations at the Landing hit the news and caught the conscience of many. Like the schoolhouse steps at Little Rock, or the bridge at Selma, Frank’s Landing came to signify a threshold for change, and Billy Frank, Jr., became a leading architect of consensus, a role he continues today as one of the most colorful and accomplished figures in the modern history of the Pacific Northwest.

    In Messages from Frank’s Landing, Charles Wilkinson explores the broad historical, legal, and social context of Indian fishing rights in the Pacific Northwest, providing a dramatic account of the people and issues involved. He draws on his own decades of experience as a lawyer working with Indian people, and focuses throughout on Billy Frank and the river flowing past Frank’s Landing. In all aspects of Frank’s life as an activist, from legal settlements negotiated over salmon habitats destroyed by hydroelectric plants, to successful negotiations with the U.S. Army for environmental protection of tribal lands, Wilkinson points up the significance of the traditional Indian world view -- the powerful and direct legacy of Frank’s father, conveyed through generations of Indian people who have crafted a practical working philosophy and a way of life. Drawing on many hours spent talking and laughing with Billy Frank while canoeing the Nisqually watershed, Wilkinson conveys words of respect and responsibility for the earth we inhabit and for the diverse communities the world encompasses. These are the messages from Frank’s Landing. Wilkinson brings welcome clarity to complex legal issues, deepening our insight into a turbulent period in the political and environmental history of the Northwest. ... Read more


    15. Environmental Law and Policy, 3d (Concepts and Insights)
    by James Salzman, Barton H. Thompson, Jr.
    Paperback
    list price: $47.00 -- our price: $45.12
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 1599417715
    Publisher: Foundation Press
    Sales Rank: 75467
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    Editorial Review

    Environmental Law and Policy is a user-friendly, concise, inexpensive treatment of environmental law. Written to be read rather than used as a reference source, the authors provide a broad conceptual overview of environmental law while also explaining the major statutes and cases. The book is intended for four audiences - students (both graduate and undergraduate) seeking a readable study guide for their environmental law and policy courses; professors who do not use casebooks (relying on their own materials or case studies) but want an integrating text for their courses or want to include conceptual materials on the major legal issues; and practicing lawyers and environmental professionals who want a concise, readable overview of the field. For the Third Edition, new chapters have been written on climate change and energy, exploring the important developments in these rapidly changing areas.The first part of the book provides an engaging discussion of the major themes and issues that cross-cut environmental law. Starting with the first chapter's brief history of environmentalism in America, the second chapter goes on to explore the importance and implications of basic themes that occur in virtually all environmental conflicts, including scientific uncertainty, market failures, problems of scale, public choice theory, etc. It then presents three dominant perspectives in the field that drive policy development - environmental rights, utilitarianism, and environmental justice. Chapter Three fills in the remaining legal background for understanding environmental protection, reviewing the theory of instrument choice, the basics of administrative law, core concepts in constitutional law (e.g., takings, the commerce clause), and the doctrines associated with how citizen groups shape environmental law (such as standing).The second part of the book examines the substance of environmental law, with separate sections on each of the major statutes. International issues such as ozone depletion, climate change, and transboundary waste disposal are also addressed. These chapters build on the themes and conceptual framework laid down in the first part of the text in order to integrate the discussion of individual statutes into a broad portrait of the law. ... Read more


    16. Global Environmental Governance: Foundations of Contemporary Environmental Studies (Foundations of Contemporary Environmental Studies Series)
    by JamesGustave Speth, Peter Haas
    Paperback
    list price: $21.95 -- our price: $21.73
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 1597260819
    Publisher: Island Press
    Sales Rank: 270607
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    Editorial Review

    Today's most pressing environmental problems are planetary in scope, confounding the political will of any one nation. How can we solve them?

    Global Environmental Governance offers the essential information, theory, and practical insight needed to tackle this critical challenge. It examines ten major environmental threats-climate disruption, biodiversity loss, acid rain, ozone depletion, deforestation, desertification, freshwater degradation and shortages, marine fisheries decline, toxic pollutants, and excess nitrogen-and explores how they can be addressed through treaties, governance regimes, and new forms of international cooperation.

    Written by Gus Speth, one of the architects of the international environmental movement, and accomplished political scientist Peter M. Haas, Global Environmental Governance tells the story of how the community of nations, nongovernmental organizations, scientists, and multinational corporations have in recent decades created an unprecedented set of laws and institutions intended to help solve large-scale environmental problems. The book critically examines the serious shortcomings of current efforts and the underlying reasons why disturbing trends persist. It presents key concepts in international law and regime formation in simple, accessible language, and describes the current institutional landscape as well as lessons learned and new directions needed in international governance. Global Environmental Governance is a concise guide, with lists of key terms, study questions, and other features designed to help readers think about and understand the concepts discussed.
    (20070101) ... Read more

    17. Employment Law (4th Edition)
    by John J. Moran
    Hardcover
    list price: $193.33 -- our price: $130.88
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0136009964
    Publisher: Prentice Hall
    Sales Rank: 248717
    Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars
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    Editorial Review

    Key Benefit: Moran approaches employment law with a focus on discrimination and employment regulation, presenting principles of law in a step-building approach and illustrating those principles with stimulating employment perspectives.
    Key Topics: The author examines ethical issues, offers HR advice, and covers employee lessons in the workplace. 

    Market: For courses in Employment Law, Labor Law, and Human Resource Management.
    ... Read more

    Reviews

    3-0 out of 5 stars Pretty Good Book, February 8, 2010
    This book is just OK. It's definitely written from/for an HR person, not a law student, although it's absolutely full of cases which makes it a bit difficult to read. The general approach is to present a topic and then give real case examples. The topic information is often, in my opinion, a bit short and could be easily expanded to explain the critical points the cases are trying to enforce / develop. The cases themselves make the book long and difficult to read, mostly because you have to read the back story and legal argument to get to the reason why it was included in a particular chapter. Also, I do find it a bit preachy... summaries and quick examples often tell you not just about the law, but about how certain things are morally right and wrong. If this is for a class, you're stuck.. if you want a good HR / Law book, you might want to try another book.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Would Definitely Recommend, May 21, 2010
    This book came in the condition it stated on the site(like new), and it came in a TIMELY MANNER. I will be using them to order future textbooks--definitely. The costs savings was over $100!!

    4-0 out of 5 stars Excellent, July 4, 2009
    I purchased this book used, it was recieved in a timely fashion and its in great condition. There is no writing or torn pages.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Great Human Resource Book, October 15, 2008
    I loved this book; granted I am a Human Resource major who loves law but seriously this book was very well put together. I actually read every word of this book and I can't say that about any other class/book. The way the explained things was easy to understand and kept you interested with lots of examples. I will be keeping this book for future reference!

    3-0 out of 5 stars An easy read, but a bit out of date, February 12, 2003
    I had to read this for a class and found it easy to read, but really out of date. Although revised in December of 2001, there is so much it left out in terms of changes in technology and 911 (and yes, these things do apply to Economics!) that I wonder how thoroughly it was updated.


    If you're buying it, most probably you have to. Ask your professor to find a more current edition, but one that's as interesting and easy a read as this one, and you'll do fine in your Eco class!

    5-0 out of 5 stars Best book on employment law out there!, January 21, 2001
    This book makes a dry subject interesting and understandable. It is packed full of useful information. ... Read more


    18. Energy Law in a Nutshell (Nutshell Series)
    by Joseph P. Tomain, Richard D. Cudahy
    Paperback
    list price: $35.00 -- our price: $32.84
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0314150587
    Publisher: Thomson West
    Sales Rank: 66497
    Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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    Reviews

    4-0 out of 5 stars Excellent Primer, December 16, 2008
    I was about to enter my clerkship at the FERC and wanted an good overview at the energy legal industry. This book did not disappoint. My only issue with it was the political undertones in favor of a centrally controlled and planned energy market. It would have been better to leave the opinion to a law review article and simply stick to an overview of the law and the industry. ... Read more


    19. Selected Environmental Law Statutes, 2010-2011 Educational Edition
    by West
    Paperback
    list price: $46.00 -- our price: $41.40
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0314911618
    Publisher: West
    Sales Rank: 284576
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    Editorial Review

    This work contains the statutes one may confront in a law school environmental law course. Topics covered include public health, agriculture, commerce, mineral lands, and navigable waters. ... Read more


    20. Living with the Earth, Third Edition: Concepts in Environmental Health Science (Living with the Earth: Concepts in Environmental Health Science)
    by Gary S. Moore
    Hardcover
    list price: $67.95 -- our price: $41.61
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0849379989
    Publisher: CRC Press
    Sales Rank: 180807
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    Editorial Review

    Includes all the bells and whistles you and your students have come to expect

    It’s hard to imagine a book more innovative and groundbreaking than Living with the Earth: Concepts in Environmental Health Science, Third Edition. The first edition won the CHOICE award for Outstanding Academic Book and both previous editions became bestsellers in their own right.

    See what’s new and updated coverage includes:

    • Emergency preparedness for environmental health practitioners including a discussion on their roles and operations
    • Population dynamics, various cultural philosophies regarding overpopulation, and underpopulation in the developed nations
    • Mechanisms of environmental disease with emphasis on genetic disease and developmental disorders
    • Alternative to chemical pest control
    • Genetic basis of cancer
    • The growing problems of asthma and air pollutants as well as newly emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases
    • An exploration of the mechanisms of toxicity, with special reference to the immune system and endocrine disruption
    • Hazardous waste treatment, use, and recycling
    • HACCP and assuring food quality, food safety issues, and Food Quality Protection Act
    • Risk assessment and risk management principles
    • A discussion in the change in directions in regulatory compliance
    • Technical illustrations, charts, graphs, and photographs that improve learning and simplify concepts

    What’s on the Web:

    • Test bank and study questions
    • Microsoft PowerPoint presentation slides in digital format
    • Study guides with detailed notes, color figures, and tables
    • Printable sample questions and answers for each chapter
    • Search tools for online journals and databases covering useful, up-to-date information

    Incorporates traditional concepts with new, emerging, and controversial issues

    Always on the forefront of new ideas and new technology, the book includes up-to-date topics and information enhanced by Web features that make the book easy to use for professor and students alike.

    ... Read more

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