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| Dimensions: 6'' x 9'' |
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| 147 pages |
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AEI Press
(Washington)
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| Publication Date: April 1996 |
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| Paperback |
| ISBN: 0-8447-3981-2 |
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| Hardcover |
| ISBN: 0-8447-3980-4 |
| Price: $ 29.95 |
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Michael S. Greve argues that environmental values no longer play a formative role in American law. Although ecological presumptions have some force, the author shows, the emerging legal doctrines are consistent with more efficient and sensible regulation. It would be a mistake, Greve cautions, to look to the judiciary for wholesale regulatory reform: such reform can come only from Congress. [more...]
Michael S. Greve is the executive director of the Center for Individual Rights and an adjunct scholar at AEI.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
- The Ecological Paradigm
- Takings
- Standing to Sue
- Judicial Review of Environmental Regulation
- Functional Rules for a Dysfunctional System
- Environmental Ideology and Real-World Politics
Index About the Author |
View Book Summary