Two of Brad’s most recent articles were accepted for publication. Does United States v. Windsor Open the Door to Congressional Standing Rights? will be published in volume 76 of the University of Pittsburgh Law Review, and No Article III Standing for Private Plaintiffs Challenging State Greenhouse Gas Regulations: The Ninth Circuit’s Decision in Washington Environmental Council v. Bellon, will be published in volume 63 of the American University Law Review.
Brad’s review, co-authored with Chiddy Ukonne, of David R. Boyd’s The Right to a Healthy Environment, Revitalizing Canada’s Constitution (UBC Press, W. Wesley Pue general ed., 2012), was recently published at 36 Human Rights Quarterly 258-66 (February 2014) (Johns Hopkins University Press).
In March, Brad made a presentation, “Environmental Law Overview on Climate Change Issues” at a meeting of the American Society for Quality, Cincinnati Section.
Finally, several of Brad’s articles were cited:
- Can Plaintiffs Use Multinational Environmental Treaties as Customary International Law to Sue Under the Alien Tort Statute?, 2007 Utah L. Rev. 1085 (2007), in Kailyn Ellison, Rio+20: How the Tension Between Developing and Developed Countries Influenced Sustainable Development Efforts, 27 Pac. McGeorge Global Bus. & Dev. L.J. 107 (2014);
- Standing and Statistical Persons: A Risk-Based Approach to Standing, 36 Ecology L.Q. 665 (2009), in Richard M. Re, Relative Standing, 102 Geo. L.J. 1191 (2014); and
- Superfund Contractors and Agency Capture, 2 N.Y.U. Envtl. L.J. 34, 49-52 (1993), in Sarah Shik Lamdan, Sunshine for Sale: Environmental Contractors and the Freedom of Information Act, 15 Vt. J. Envtl. L. 227 (2014).