Joseph P. Tomain / Sept. & Oct. 2012

Several of Joe’s publications and books were cited:

  • Cyberspace is Outside the Schoolhouse Gate: Offensive, Online Student Speech Receives First Amendment Protection, 59 Drake L. Rev. 97 (2010), in Christopher Lynett, Student Author, Constitutional Law—Revising the Application of Tinker and Fraser in the Age of the Internet—J.S. Ex Rel. Snyder v. Blue Mountain School District, 650 F.3d 915 (3d Cir. 2011), 17 Suffolk J. Trial & App. Advoc. 407 (2012), and in Christopher A. Sickles, Student Author, Bridging the Liability Gap: How Kowalski’s Interpretation of Reasonable Foreseeability Limits School Liability for Inaction in Cases of Cyberbullying, 21 Wm. & Mary Bill Rts. J. 241 (2012);
  • Ending Dirty Energy Policy: Prelude to Climate Change (2011), in Lincoln L. Davies, State Renewable Portfolio Standards: Is There a “Race” and is it “to the Top”?, 3 San Diego J. Climate & Energy L. 3 (2012);
  • “Our Generation’s Sputnik Moment”: Regulating Energy Innovation, 31 Utah Envtl. L. Rev. 389 (2011), in Lincoln L. Davies, Reconciling Renewable Portfolio Standards and Feed-In Tariffs, 32 Utah Envtl. L. Rev. 311 (2012);
  • Energy Law in a Nutshell (2004), in Steven Weissman, Effective Renewable Energy Policy: Leave it to the States?, 3 San Diego J. Climate & Energy L. 345 (2012);
  • The Dominant Model of United States Energy Policy, 61 U. Colo. L. Rev. 355 (1990), in Robert L. Glicksman, Solar Energy Development on the Federal Public Lands: Environmental Trade-Offs on the Road to a Lower-Carbon Future, 3 San Diego J. Climate & Energy L. 107 (2012);
  • The Past and Future of Electricity Regulation, 32 Envtl L. 435 (2002), in Darryl G. Stein, Perilous Proxies: Issues of Scale for Consumer Representation In Agency Proceedings, 67 N.Y.U. Ann. Surv. Am. L. 513 (2012);
  • The Politics of Clean Energy: Moving Beyond the Beltway, 3 San Diego J. Climate & Energy L. 299 (2012);
  • Skills Skepticism in the Postclinic World, 40 J. Legal Educ. 307 (1990), in Leary Davis, Competence as Situationally Appropriate Conduct: An Overarching Concept for Lawyering, Leadership, and Professionalism, 52 Santa Clara L. Rev. 725 (2012); and
  • The Dominant Model of United States Energy Policy, 61 U. Colo. L. Rev. 355 (1990), in Lincoln L. Davies, Reconciling Renewable Portfolio Standards and Feed-In Tariffs, 32 Utah Envtl. L. Rev. 311 (2012).

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