Constitutional Conservation in California: Evaluation of Environmental Rights in Law and Governance
Date
2023-04-28
Author
Advisors
Nowlin, Michelle
Albright, Elizabeth
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Abstract
The United States legal system has played a crucial role in modern environmental protection.
However, environmental laws are difficult to enforce, reactive, and do not adequately
protect ecosystems and human health. New legal movements like Rights of Nature and
Green Amendments seek to close these gaps by granting legal rights to either ecosystems
or human communities to defend their natural environments. Through a comparative legal
analysis, this project concludes that the most effective policy option is to grant
humans the right to a clean and healthy environment. This approach offers numerous
advantages, including compatibility with existing state laws, established precedent
in other states, and anticipatory and preventative language. To put this policy into
action at the state level, the project includes a stakeholder analysis and assessment
of California's legal landscape. Findings suggest that such an amendment is likely
to pass through California's state legislature.
Type
Master's projectDepartment
Nicholas School of the EnvironmentPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27241Citation
Carter, Michelle Elizabeth (2023). Constitutional Conservation in California: Evaluation of Environmental Rights in Law
and Governance. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27241.Collections
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