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EVENTS
Environmental Federalism?
State Activism on Cleaning the Air
Date: Tuesday, May 13, 2003
Time: 1:00 PM — 3:00 PM
Location: Wohlstetter Conference Center, Twelfth Floor, AEI 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036
 
 
About This Event

For most of the environmental era, business groups (seconded by many economists) criticized environmental regulation as overly centralized and rigid. Environmental advocates, for their part, insisted on tough national regulation as the only means of remedying pollution that crosses state boundaries and of preventing a "race to the bottom" among the states. In recent years, however, states have come to "think globally" and "act locally." Even on issues that plainly transcend state and even national boundaries, such as air pollution and global warming, many states have taken measures far in excess of federal requirements. This marked shift has forced scholars, business groups, and environmentalists to reexamine their positions and strategies.

An AEI panel will review state activities on such issues as global warming, power plant permitting, and car emission standards. The panel will discuss the desirable role and scope of national, state, and local regulation and the need, if any, for legal and regulatory reforms.

 
Agenda

12:45 p.m.

Registration

 

1:00

Panelists:

Barry Rabe, University of Michigan

 
 

Robert Gasaway, Kirkland & Ellis
Marlo Lewis, Competitive Enterprise Institute

 
 

Christopher Schroeder, Duke Law School

 

Moderator:

Michael S. Greve, AEI Federalism Project

3:00

Adjournment

 
 
 
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