000 01382nam a22001577a 4500
999 _c516334
_d516334
008 210223b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aGerrard, Michael B.
_925158
245 _aAn environmental lawyer's fraught quest for legal tools to hold back the seas
260 _aDaedalus
300 _a149(4), Fall 2020: p.79-95
520 _aThe law is the principal mechanism by which society resolves disputes and implements policies. For more than forty years, I have worked to use the law to address environmental problems, initially by trying to stop projects that would increase pollution and harm communities. But there are limits to what the courts can do without explicit direction from legislatures. Climate change is a prime example. Some have seen litigation as a silver bullet, but at least so far that has not been the case. Elections matter more than lawsuits. Until and unless elections bring to power a president, a Congress, and local officials who will take the necessary measures, litigation is needed to inhibit those who will try to move backwards, spur on those with good intentions, help implement the policies set by wise Congresses past, and continue the quest for redress for victims. Well-crafted laws can also lead the way to solutions.- Reproduced
650 _aClimate change
_925159
773 _aDaedalus
906 _aENVIRONMENT
942 _cAR