From jroxas at law.fsu.edu Mon Jun 6 11:21:41 2022 From: jroxas at law.fsu.edu (Jella Roxas) Date: Mon, 6 Jun 2022 15:21:41 +0000 Subject: [Law-envtlcert] DUE END OF JUNE: 39th Annual Smith-Babcock-Williams Student Writing Competition - American Planning Association Planning And Law Division In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear FSU Environmental Law Certificate Students, The 39th Annual Smith-Babcock-Williams Student Writing Competition, which honors the memory of three leading figures in American city planning law (R. Marlin Smith, Richard Babcock, and Norman Williams) is open to law students and planning students writing on a question of significance in planning, planning law, land use law, local government law or environmental law. The Competition is open to both current students and recent graduates (less than five years). Entries can include articles written for academic journal or law review publication, long essays, or shorter essays (at least 2,000 words). As in past years, the winning entry will be awarded a prize of $2,000, the second-place paper will receive a prize of $400, and one honorable mention paper will receive $100. All three winning entries will be published in the semi-annual newsletter of the Planning and Law Division. Depending on the format of the winning entry and the interest of the author, the Competition Committee may also work with the winner to place the article in a journal or coordinate and present a Division webinar. In 2021, a winning entry on vacant properties was the foundation of a webinar. The deadline for submission of entries is June 30, 2022. Winners will be announced by August 31, 2022. Please see attached document for more information. If you have questions, please contact David Henning at dhenning at clarionassociates.com and including "PLD" in the subject. Jella V. Roxas Program Associate - Environmental Law Florida State University College of Law 425 W Jefferson St. Tallahassee, FL 32306 jroxas at law.fsu.edu | 850-6458749 | Suite A227 Follow our FB page: FSU Environmental Law -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: APA-PLD Student Writing Competition 2022c.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 245310 bytes Desc: APA-PLD Student Writing Competition 2022c.pdf URL: From jroxas at law.fsu.edu Tue Jun 14 15:51:01 2022 From: jroxas at law.fsu.edu (Jella Roxas) Date: Tue, 14 Jun 2022 19:51:01 +0000 Subject: [Law-envtlcert] 2021-2022 Tenth Annual Animal Law Writing Competition (Deadline: July 19, 2022) Message-ID: Dear FSU Environmental Law Certificate Students, The FSU College of Law's Animal Legal Defense Fund Chapter is hosting the Tenth Annual Animal Law Writing Competition. This competition seeks to foster legal scholarship among those in the legal field in the area of animals and the law. Topic: Any topic on Animal Law Eligibility: The submission must be written by a student currently enrolled in a Florida law school or an attorney who has graduated within the last year from a Florida law school. Deadline: Papers must be emailed no later than July 19, 2022 Prize: 1st Place, $1,000 and a Certificate of Achievement More details about the competition on the attached document. Good day! Jella Roxas Program Associate - Environmental Program Florida State University College of Law 425 West Jefferson St. Tallahassee, FL 32306 jroxas at law.fsu.edu | 850-645-8749 | Suite A227 Follow our FB page: FSU Environmental Law -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: ALS Writing Competition 2021-22 Flyer.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 1565765 bytes Desc: ALS Writing Competition 2021-22 Flyer.pdf URL: From jroxas at law.fsu.edu Fri Jun 17 14:14:55 2022 From: jroxas at law.fsu.edu (Jella Roxas) Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2022 18:14:55 +0000 Subject: [Law-envtlcert] ELULS Law School Note Competition Message-ID: Dear FSU Environmental Law Students, The Environmental and Land Use Law Section (ELULS) of the Florida Bar has planned an exciting conference in Amelia Island in September to celebrate its 50th Anniversary with a theme, "Looking Backwards, Looking Forwards", highlighting the evolution of a highly dynamic area of law over the last fifty years. In recognition that law students are the future of environmental law, ELULS' Law School Committee presents a special opportunity for Florida law students to join and share their vision of Florida's legal environmental and land use future over the next fifty years. Students currently enrolled (2021-2022) are encouraged to submit a note addressing an important or pressing environmental and/or land use topic of his/her choosing. Deadline is on Monday, August 1st. For more information about this note competition, please see attached flyer. Should you have questions, please reach out to Joan Matthews (matthews.joant at gmail.com), ELULS' Law School Committee Co-Chair. Good day! Jella V. Roxas Program Associate - Environmental Law Florida State University College of Law 425 W Jefferson St. Tallahassee, FL 32306 jroxas at law.fsu.edu | 850-6458749 | Suite A227 Follow our FB page: FSU Environmental Law -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: FLYER (LAW SCHOOL NOTE COMPETITION.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 5111096 bytes Desc: FLYER (LAW SCHOOL NOTE COMPETITION.pdf URL: From ERyan at law.fsu.edu Wed Jun 29 18:05:19 2022 From: ERyan at law.fsu.edu (Erin Ryan) Date: Wed, 29 Jun 2022 22:05:19 +0000 Subject: [Law-envtlcert] FSU Program on Envtl., Energy, & Land Use Law - Summer 2022 Newsletter In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: [Florida State University] Center for Environmental, Energy, and Land Use Law July 01, 2022 [https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20220629/0d/7a/3f/45/5cf677efd0e18359f91c70bf_434x290.png] Erin Ryan, Associate Dean for Environmental Programs On behalf of the Center for Environmental, Energy, and Land Use Law here at FSU, I?m delighted to announce that Professor Tisha Joseph Holmes has joined our Program as a Courtesy Professor of Law. As a faculty member in FSU?s Department of Urban and Regional Planning, her research focuses on promoting grassroots climate response capacity through community outreach and participatory engagement. Professor Holmes teaches climate change and community resilience, land use planning, and coastal planning. She will welcome our law students into her Land Use Planning course next fall, which will emphasize environmental justice. Professor Holmes holds a Ph.D. in Urban Planning from UCLA, an MPA in Environmental Science and Policy from Columbia University, and a BA in Political Science and Environmental Studies from Williams College. She is She is the lead researcher in the Florida Building Resilience Against Climate Effects (BRACE) Program, which is working to improve public health sector efforts to respond to climate variability by incorporating the best available science into routine public health practice. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation awarded her a 2022 research grant for her work on fostering transformative policies at the intersection of climate, health equity, and environmental change. She is also a recipient of the FSU University Community Engaged Teaching Award. Welcome, Professor Holmes! [https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20220629/d6/98/7f/6d/5330b09cf59fad26eb09ea3a_472x472.jpg] Professor Tisha Holmes "I am excited to join the FSU Environmental Law community as a Courtesy Faculty member. I look forward to creating spaces of learning for Law and Planning students to critically engage with each other on environmental, climate change and justice issues in interdisciplinary and collaborative ways." Student Spotlight Congratulations to our J.D. graduates who complete the Certificate Program during the Spring 2022 term: Catherine Bauman and Katherine Hupp (with Highest Honors), Taylor Greenan and Barclay Mitchell (with High Honors), Keirsey Carns (with Honors), and Macie Codina, Cassidy Farach, Christopher Perrigan, Cameron Polomski, and Rylie Slaybaugh. We are proud of each and every one of you! The Certificate Program enables our J.D. students to specialize in the areas of environment, energy, and land use law while choosing electives, satisfying the upper-level writing requirement, and meeting the general practical skills requirement to graduate with the J.D. Bsaed on the expertise they have acquired in the program, we encourage our alumni and employers in the field to give them special consideration in hiring decisions. [https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20220629/17/c9/56/a1/ad3fae8a0320a026abca94d0_512x340.jpg] We also congratulate E. Marion Brummal of Montgomery, AL, who completed his Environmental LL.M. degree at the end of fall semester. The LL.M. in Environmental Law and Policy enriches the education experience of LL.M. students by enabling them to acquire post-graduate expertise in the areas of environmental, energy, and land use law. Good luck, Marion--we expect great things! Faculty Spotlight: Erin Ryan [https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20220629/25/24/ee/a0/43ace056bd2e2b970c2fb4e5_1240x700.jpg] Professor Ryan, upper left, teaching the Negotiation Workshop over Zoom during the Pandemic. [https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20220629/06/39/61/d4/b4f3090bf35b72a3aa82fbf6_660x360.jpg] Professor Erin Ryan, our own Associate Dean for Environmental Programs, received the 2021-2022 University Teaching Award for Innovation in Teaching at the graduate level. She was recognized for her dynamic and interactive Negotiations Workshop, which introduces both the theory and practice of negotiation in a simulation clinical setting. Students participate in weekly simulations, discussions, and writing exercises designed to develop holistic negotiating skills and a framework for ongoing learning, long after the course ends. Associate Dean Ryan, a former Hewlett Fellow at the Harvard Program on Negotiation, is the Elizabeth C. and Clyde W. Atkinson Professor and Director of the FSU Center for Environmental, Energy, and Land Use Law. She specializes in environmental and natural resources law, water, property and land use law, federalism, and negotiation. She has taught Negotiation longer than all other courses in her repertoire and publishes frequently on topics in intergovernmental bargaining and negotiated environmental governance. Faculty Scholarship [https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20220629/ec/68/eb/c5/96f49c53d3c5ce33ebc49a3f_430x286.png] Shi-Ling Hsu, D?Alemberte Professor Whither, Rationality? 120 MICH. L. REV. 1165 (2022). Adapting to a 4?C World, 52 ENVTL. L. REP. 10211 (2022) (with 17 others). Climate Insecurity, __ UTAH L. REV. __ (forthcoming 2023). Carbon Taxation and Economic Inequality, 15 HARV. L. & POL'Y REV. 551 (2021). CAPITALISM AND THE ENVIRONMENT: A PROPOSAL TO SAVE THE PLANET (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2021). [https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20220629/0d/7a/3f/45/5cf677efd0e18359f91c70bf_430x284.png] Erin Ryan, Elizabeth C. & Clyde W. Atkinson Professor Privatization, Public Commons, and Takingsification in Environmental Law, 171 U. PENN. L. REV. __ (forthcoming 2023). The Public Trust Doctrine, Property, and Society, in PROPERTY, LAW, AND SOCIETY (Nicole Graham, et al., eds., forthcoming 2022). Environmental Rights for the 21st Century: Comprehensive Analysis of the Public Trust Doctrine and the Rights of Nature Movement, 43 CARDOZO L. REV. 2447 (2021) (with Holly Parker Curry & Hayes Rule). The Twin Environmental Law Problems of Preemption and Political Scale, in ENVIRONMENTAL LAW, DISRUPTED (Keith Hirokawa & Jessica Owley, eds., 2021). A Short History of the Public Trust Doctrine and its Intersection with Private Water Law, 39 VIRGINIA ENVTL. L.J. 135 (2020). [https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20220629/d4/99/24/67/4b250865473ad7f607d23694_430x286.png] Mark Seidenfeld, Patricia A. Dore Professor of Administrative Law The Limits of Deliberation about the Public?s Values: Reviewing BLAKE EMERSON, THE PUBLIC'S LAW: ORIGINS AND ARCHITECTURE OF PROGRESSIVE DEMOCRACY, 199 MICH. L. REV. 1111 (2021) (Book Review). Textualism?s Theoretical Bankruptcy and Its Implications for Statutory Interpretation, 100 B.U. L. REV. 1817 (2020). The Bounds of Congress?s Spending Power, 61 ARIZ. L. REV. 1 (2019). The Problem with Agency Guidance - or Not, 36 YALE J. ON REG.: NOTICE & COMMENT (2019). A Process Based Approach to Presidential Exit, 67 DUKE L.J. 1775 (2018) (invited comment for symposium on ?Regulatory Exit?). [https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20220629/23/49/b4/b0/8edd457928b8fe8f2dfe21d5_428x286.png] Donald J. Weidner, Dean Emeritus and Alumni Centennial Professor The Unfortunate Role of Special Litigation Committees in LLC, (forthcoming BUS. LAWYER, 2022). LLC Default Rules Are Hazardous to Member Liquidity, 76 BUS LAWYER 151 (2020). Dissatisfied Members in Florida LLCs: Remedies, 18 FLA. ST. U. BUS. REV. 1 (2019). New FASB Rules on Accounting for Leases: A Sarbanes-Oxley Promise Delivered, 72 BUS. LAWYER 367 (2017). Leaving Law Firms with Client Fees: Florida's Path, 91-0 FLA. B. J. 9 (2017). [https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20220629/d6/98/7f/6d/5330b09cf59fad26eb09ea3a_332x332.jpg] Tisha Homes, Courtesy Professor of Law Assessment of an Evacuation Shelter Program for People with Access and Functional Needs in Monroe County, Florida During Hurricane Irma, VOL 306, SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE (2022) (with Patrice Williams, Sandy Wong, Kathryn Smith, John Bandzuh & Christopher Uejio). Locating Neighborhood Displacement Risks to Climate Gentrification Pressures in Three Coastal Counties in Florida, PROFESSIONAL GEOGRAPHER, (forthcoming 2022) (with B. Melix, C. Uejio, A. Jackson, & W. Butler). What's Problem with Disaster? Anthropology, Social Work and the Qualitative Slot, QUALITATIVE SOCIAL WORK, 20, 1496-1516 (2021) (with J. Mathias, T. McCreary, & J. Elsner). Implementing a Mandate to Plan for Sea Level Rise: Top-down, Bottom-up and Middle Out Actions in the Tampa Bay Region, JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT (2021) (with W. Butler). Mandated Planning for Climate Change: Responsible to the Peril of Flood Act for Sea Level Rise Adaptation in Florida, JOURNAL OF AMERICAN PLANNING ASSOCIATION (2021) (with W. Butler & Z. Lange). Upcoming Events As usual, the Center for Environmental, Energy, and Land Use Law will be hosting a full slate of impressive environmental, land use, and administrative law events and activities in the coming academic year. [https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20220629/e2/26/b5/cc/1498e8eb009aa281623af4dd_768x492.jpg] Dean Elizabeth Kronk Warner of University of Utah and Professor William Buzbee of Georgetown. Each year, the College of Law's nationally Distinguished Environmental Law program features some of the nation?s leading environmental, energy, and land use scholars and policy makers. This year, we will be joined by Elizabeth Kronk Warner, Dean and Professor of Law at S.J. Quinney College of Law at the University of Utah, and William Buzbee, the Edward and Carole Walter Professor of Law at the Georgetown Law Center, who will share their expertise with our communities in the Fall and Spring, respectively. The Center will also host an Environmental Law Career Panel, a number of Enrichment Seminars, and a Spring semester field trip. We will share full information about our slate of events for the 2022-2023 academic year in our next newsletter, and the full list will always be updated on our website. [Twitter] [Facebook] [Instagram] [LinkedIn] [YouTube] ABOUT US | ACADEMICS | ADMISSIONS & FINANCIAL AID | OUR FACULTY | ALUMNI | CAREERS | STUDENTS -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: