Abstract
The nation’s environmental regulatory architecture may not have changed significantly over the past few decades, but the range of environmental problems has. Regulatory measures designed to address the industrial pollution of the twentieth century are poorly suited to address the more complex and difficult challenges of the twenty-first.
There is an urgent need to debate the future of environmental protection in this country. If the debate is to be productive, it needs to span the political spectrum. Therein lies a problem: It is unclear whether many on the political right are prepared to engage in serious policy discussion about the future of environmental policy. While there is no shortage of complaints about centralized government regulation, few are willing to suggest alternatives. Those on the political right have largely failed to engage in meaningful discussion about how the nation’s environmental goals may be best achieved. Perhaps as a consequence, the general premises underlying existing environmental laws have gone unchallenged and few meaningful reforms have been proposed, let alone adopted.
This Essay seeks to outline the foundation of a conservative alternative to the conventional environmental paradigm. After surveying contemporary conservative approaches to environmental policies, this Essay briefly sketches some problems with the conventional environmental paradigm, particularly its emphasis on prescriptive regulation and the centralization of regulatory authority in the hands of the federal government. The Essay then concludes with a summary of several environmental principles that could provide the basis for a conservative alternative to conventional environmental policies.
This abstract has been adapted from the author's introduction.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
Spring 2013
Publication Information
23 Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum 253-280 (2013)
Repository Citation
Adler, Jonathan H., "Conservative Principles for Environmental Reform" (2013). Faculty Publications. 2306.
https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/facpubs/2306
Comments
Written for the conference Conservative Visions of Our Environmental Future (2012) at Duke Law School.