environmental law
Environmental law refers to a variety of protections which share the goal of protecting the environment.
Environmental law refers to a variety of protections which share the goal of protecting the environment.
The United States government regulates activities that impact the environment through a complex scheme of statutes and agency regulations.
Industrial development is the planning, zoning, construction, etc., of facilities intended for industrial use, such as manufacturing goods or processing raw materials.
International environmental law (sometimes international ecological law) is a field of international law regulating the behavior of states and international organizations concerning the environment. See: Phillipe Sands, et al, Principles of International Environmental Law (4th ed., Cambridge, 2018). Core global regulation domains include the world's oceans and fisheries management, the polar ice caps, and the regulation of carbon and other particulate emiss
Lacey Act (1900) prohibits the transportation of endangered species or banned animal and plant species into the United States and across state borders.
Natural resources, as defined in the Code of Federal Regulations (40 C.F.R.), encompass land, fish, wildlife, biota, air, water, ground water, drinking water supplies, and other such resources belonging to, managed by, held in trust by, appertaining to, or otherwise controlled by the United States, any state or local government, or any foreign government.