Best natural resources law books according to redditors

We found 19 Reddit comments discussing the best natural resources law books. We ranked the 15 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Environmental & Natural Resources Law:

u/KanataTheVillage · 22 pointsr/conspiracy

Might I recommend the book Wild Law if Szimard's work spoke to you

u/Globula · 3 pointsr/Green

Green Metropolis - For a good read.

Environmental Justice - For notes from legal cases.

The Environment Equation - For specific steps you can take.

u/SarahC · 3 pointsr/climateskeptics

I hadn't thought that through at all - once you mentioned it, I saw how obvious it was - you're right, everything fits in with the Commie cause. =(

Next step - one world government, and all of us worshipping Dear Leader. - For climate change management. Come to mention it - I've already heard European leaders suggesting that too!

The world would be like North Korea, but with no borders to escape to.

https://vancouversun.com/opinion/columnists/douglas-todd-we-might-need-a-global-government-to-fight-ever-hotter-summers

https://www.amazon.com/Climate-Change-Government-Population-Control-ebook/dp/B01BL2XYLW

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_government

u/JoinTheFrontier · 3 pointsr/politics
u/Ash_Ash_Oiseau · 3 pointsr/literature

Hmm, well the thing about the Gothic revival (as you so call it- I would consider Frankenstein to have been in the Romantic era and Dracula and Jekyl and Hyde to have been Victorian) is that a lot of those novels took or straight up interpolate old folk songs and stories- however Gothic literature's revival was put in place by 18th century German writers which influenced the leading lights of the English movement- Radcliffe, Matthew Lewis for example- and these particular writers usually had an advantage in having been able to have read the new German Gothic novels, or German folk stories and poems.

Most of what I'm referring to is explained in detail in the introduction to this edition of Matthew Lewis' The Monk - the most controversial Gothic novel (or even book) of the age and was all written by a 19 year old who was severely bored and ennuied while travelling across Europe. I'd highly recommend it- it's quite erratic; bits of satire, horror and vividly camp sex scenes as well as having insanely bleak moments- but definitely undeservedly ignored and good fun and brilliantly violent.

While if you're looking for a broad overview of Gothic Literature I cannot recommend The Literature of Terror by David Punter any more- he's the expert on the Gothic and has saved my ass and several others many a time in a late night exam cram.

u/throwaway-person · 2 pointsr/answers

Yes. And plenty of others. It is much easier to understand the truth behind what is presented as science when you understand the corruption that infests the bodies that present it.

Some suggested reading:

http://www.merchantsofdoubt.org

https://www.amazon.com/Bending-Science-Special-Interests-Research/dp/0674047141

u/Wormspike · 2 pointsr/askscience

Yes. But to really appreciate the challenges and complexity, you need to understand the international system in which these conversations are happening. (At least, in my opinion).

Start with some history of the int'l system from like, 1900 to 1990. This will help you understand concepts like sovereignty, voluntary hand-binding, and the nature of treaties. Then any textbook on the basics of international law, customary v codified, enforceability, penetration, etc. From there, you can jump into Int'l environmental law. This textbook is a popular one, although it's a bit dense/wordy:

https://www.amazon.com/Principles-International-Environmental-Professor-Philippe/dp/0521140935/ref=dp_ob_image_bk

for something far more accessible, one might try out:

https://www.amazon.com/Art-Craft-International-Environmental-Law/dp/0674061799/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1496437045&sr=1-1&keywords=the+craft+of+international+environmental+law

Cheers!

u/Kynophile · 2 pointsr/zoophilia

Yes, there are radicals that want total animal liberation, and they do have a particular hatred of sex with animals. A couple of them, Carol J. Adams and Piers Beirne, have written long, detailed arguments on their positions, including why they think sex with animals should always be considered sexual assault. Their reasons pretty much boil down to treating all cases the same as rapes resulting in physical injury and treating pet ownership as similar to slavery, invalidating any claim of consent due to inherent differences in societal power.

The first one depends on ignorance of the issue, while the second depends on a form of feminism that ties individual consent to societal power structures which are difficult to demonstrate at best. Their ideas are cookie cutter Marxism applied to animals, and like all Marxism, they dismiss the rights of individuals in favor of winning an idealized class struggle, resulting in even more suffering by almost everyone they claim to be helping.

In short, their view of the world is fundamentally warped by ideology, and as a result does not have the mass appeal needed to effect real change. They cannot succeed without becoming totalitarian rulers, and while things have been getting more chaotic politically in the Western world, they have not fallen apart to that extent, nor will they as long as people continue to call out their stupidity and cruelty.

u/The_Old_Gentleman · 2 pointsr/CapitalismVSocialism

>Please explain to me how resources are collectively pooled together in specific real life terms.

In the real world common-pool resources have worked like this: There is a particular resource and a community entitled to it's use, say, a common grazing field and the local farmers that share it for grazing. In order for this common grazing field to allow the farmers to appropriate the resource with out over-consuming it, the common-pool resource system features these characteristics:

  1. Clear group boundaries.

  2. Common rules and standards for managing the commons adapted to local conditions.

  3. Participation of all affected by the rules in the decision-making process.

  4. Autonomy for the community to self-organize.

  5. Monitors that are a part of and/or directly accountable to the community, who ensure all are following the rules.

  6. The use of graduated sanctions against rule-breakers.

  7. Easily accessible dispute resolution mechanisms.

  8. In the case of large scale commons, organization in the form of nested enterprises, with the local unit at the bottom.

    A particular, contemporary real life example of this is the Maine lobsteries (see here for a simple description). The lobstermen divided themselves in seven nested zones where they built councils and elected delegates that determine rules - a limits on the number of traps they are allowed to fish, time and day of fishing, number of traps per string, etc. Lobstermen who break the rules face regular sabotage from their peers until they follow the rules again. An older example which existed up until the late 19th century would be the Russian Mir or Obshchina communes, which were village communities where land was owned in common but each family worked on a particular strip which was periodically re-allocated, and collections of different mir formed an assembly called volost. The Mir was protected by law from insolvency since it was determined that it could not lose it's land nor the peasants lose their houses and farm equipment.

    So far i've only discussed fisheries and farm-land but these design principles can also be adapted to other natural resources (from oil to mines and etc) and to a human-made resource to be pooled-in among members of a commons. An example of that would be the common irrigation systems in Nepal (alternatively, see here) or the aforementioned industrial federations in revolutionary Barcelona in 1936.

    On a world-scale, it would work in the form of nested enterprises with the local management at the base.

    >Surely there must be a central body that monitors how much is too much of resources consumed? Relying on peer to peer collective arragements leaves it to disorder and anarchy since different collectives have different estimates on what is the appropriate level of risk.

    Central authorities are terribly inefficient at monitoring such a thing as they cannot properly read and process large amounts of information that are decentralized, contextual and rapidly changing in nature. Decentralized peer-to-peer organization may face clunkiness at times, but a single mistake made by a central authority can put a whole network in jeopardy - such as the poor decisions made by Stalinist planners during collectivization made millions of peasants starve despite the higher technological development, whereas the mir system had worked on a more or less stable manner for centuries.

    >What are the benefits it loses, since it has the least to lose since it has the most proportion of resources compared to other collectives?

    Unless the fire has literally destroyed the entirety of the resource available to everyone except for one incredibly lucky collective that now monopolizes it all, the access to further common resources can always be withheld, sanctioned or cut entirely.

    >One collective is thus riskier than another. Why would I want to put my money in a riskier collective when I can put all my money in a less risky one.

    Risk is not the only economic consideration you take into account when you invest your money, and why would you invest all of the resources you possess in a single collective? You need to diversify your bonds.
u/[deleted] · 2 pointsr/reddit.com

I haven't yet read this, but I've heard it's really good. Also, any of the books under "Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought" are really good as well.

u/keryskerys · 2 pointsr/suggestmeabook

I found Nigel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter to be very readable. Uncomfortable, but has haunted me since I read it years ago.

EDIT: Matthew Lewis' The Monk was also a compelling read for me.

u/AmericaAdapts · 1 pointr/podcasts

[CLIMATE CHANGE] America Adapts - The Climate Change Podcast | You Can’t Handle the Truth: Rising Sea Levels and the Law

SFW

[America Adapts] (http://www.americaadapts.org)
A Conversation with Adaptation Lawyer Margaret Peloso
In episode 64 of America Adapts, Doug Parsons talks with Margaret Peloso, of the law firm Vinson and Elkins. Margaret shares insights from her book Adapting to Rising Sea Levels: Legal Challenges and Opportunities. Doug and Margaret dig into topics such as the conversion of private land to public land as the oceans rise; adaptation and the public trust doctrine; coastal Superfund sites and corporate responsibility; will eminent domain drive coastal planning in the years ahead and much more!
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts
Subscribe on Android
Topics discussed in this episode:
• The public trust and sea level rise;
• Legal precedent and sea level rise;
• A new definition of private property;
• Sea level rise and Superfund sites;
• Policy versus the law as an adaptation strategy;
• The legal definition of resilience;
• Adaptation law as a profession;
• The advantages and perils of using eminent domain for coastal planning;
• Favorite lawyer movies and favorite lawyer jokes.
Listen here.
Now on Spotify!

Donate here!
Subscribe/listen to podcast on Apple Podcasts.
Donate to America Adapts, we are now a tax deductible charitable organization!
Facebook and Twitter:
@Margaretepeloso
@usaadapts
https://www.facebook.com/americaadapts/timeline

www.americaadapts.org
Subscribe to America Adapts on Apple Podcasts
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/america-adapts-climate-change/id1133023095?mt=2
Listen here.
On Google Play here.
Please share on Facebook!


Links in episode:
https://www.amazon.com/Adapting-Rising-Sea-Levels-Opportunities/dp/1611636183
https://www.velaw.com/Who-We-Are/Find-a-Lawyer/Peloso--Margaret/
https://www.velaw.com/AdaptingToRisingSeaLevels/
From the NYT on chemical plants:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/02/06/climate/flood-toxic-chemicals.html
Predictive tools on SLR to assist the corporate community: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/23/climate/mapping-future-climate-risk.html
EPA’s page on Superfund and climate change:
https://www.epa.gov/superfund/superfund-climate-change-adaptation
AP article on superfund sites prone to flooding (has a great interactive map): https://www.apnews.com/31765cc6d10244588805ee738edcb36b
Australia Adaptation Summit
http://vicadaptation18.w.yrd.currinda.com/#
http://climate-adaptation-2018.w.yrd.currinda.com/what-39-s-on#program-header


America Adapts also has its own app for your listening pleasure! Just visit the App store on Apple or Google Play on Android and search “America Adapts.”
Join the climate change adaptation movement by supporting America Adapts! Please consider supporting this podcast by donating through America Adapts fiscal sponsor, the Social Good Fund. All donations are now tax deductible!
For more information on this podcast, visit the website at http://www.americaadapts.org and don't forget to subscribe to this podcast on Itunes.
Podcast Music produce by Richard Haitz Productions
Write a review on Itunes!
America Adapts on Facebook!
Join the America Adapts Facebook Community Group.
Check us out, we’re also on YouTube!
Producer Dan Ackerstein
Subscribe to America Adapts on Apple Podcasts
Doug can be contacted at americaadapts @ g mail . com

Twitter // Facebook // Itunes

u/Adaptusa · 1 pointr/podcasts

[NEWS, POP CULTURE, ENVIRONMENT] You Can’t Handle the Truth: Rising Sea Levels and the Law (Re-release)

SFW

Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Overcast | YouTube | Pandora

In episode 98 of America Adapts, which is a re-release of episode 64, Doug Parsons talks with Margaret Peloso, of the law firm Vinson and Elkins. Margaret shares insights from her book Adapting to Rising Sea Levels: Legal Challenges and Opportunities. Doug and Margaret dig into topics such as the conversion of private land to public land as the oceans rise; adaptation and the public trust doctrine; coastal Superfund sites and corporate responsibility; will eminent domain drive coastal planning in the years ahead and much more! Bonus material, Jesse Terry and Alex Wong share their music album about climate change!

| Instagram | Twitter | Website |

u/WestminsterInstitute · 1 pointr/Counterterrorism

Jeffrey M. Bale, The Darkest Side of Politics I: Postwar Fascism, Covert Operations and Terrorism

Jeffrey M. Bale, The Darkest Side of Politics II: State Terrorism, "Weapons of Mass Destruction." Religious Extremism, and Organized Crime

Richard J. Chasdi, Corporate Security Crossroads: Responding to Terrorism, Cyberthreats, and Other Hazards in the Global Business Environment

Cynthia C. Combs, Terrorism in the Twenty-First Century

Fergal F. Davis and Fiona de Londras, Critical Debates on Counter-Terrorism Judicial Review

Dave Dilegge and Robert J. Bunker, Jihadi Terrorism, Insurgency, and the Islamic State: A Small Wars Journal Anthology

Edward Dunbar, Amalio Blanco, and Desiree A. Crevecoeur-MacPhail, The Psychology of Hate Crimes as Domestic Terrorism - U.S. and Global Issues. Three Volumes - Volume 1: Theoretical, Legal, and Cultural Factors; Volume 2: Assessment Issues with Victims and Offenders, Volume 3: Interventions, Treatment, and Management

Christopher C Harmon and Randall G Bowdish, The Terrorist Argument: Modern Advocacy and Propaganda

Beatrice Heuser and Eitan Shamir, Insurgencies and Counterinsurgencies: National Styles and Strategic Cultures

Sara Yael Hirschhorn, City on a Hilltop: American Jews and Israeli Settler Movement

Michael B. Kraft and Edward Marks, Counterterrorism: From Nixon to Trump - Key Challenges, Issues, and Responses

Ronit Marzan, Yasser Arafat: Rhetoric of Alone Leader

Hilary Matfess and Michael Miklaucic, Beyond Convergence: World Without Order

Gerry Nagtzaam, From Environmental Action to Ecoterrorism? Towards a Process Theory of Environmental and Animal Rights Oriented Political Violence

Richard A. Nielsen, Deadly Clerics: Blocked Ambition and the Paths to Jihad

Donald Rooum, What is Anarchism: An Introduction

Deepak Tripathi, Breeding Ground: Afghanistan and the Origins of Islamist Terrorism

Charles Webel and Mark Tomass, Assessing the War on Terror: Western and Middle Eastern Perspectives

About the Reviewer: Dr. Joshua Sinai is the Book Reviews Editor of Perspectives on Terrorism. You can email him at: [email protected]

u/WalkingTurtleMan · 1 pointr/IAmA

I took a class in college in environmental law. It was one of the most interesting class I've taken until grad school.

I don't know much about online lectures, but my textbook was the 8th edition of Environmental Law by Kubasek and Silverman. It was published in the beginning of 2014, so we got to talk a lot about recent laws and Obama.

Hope you look into it!