ABSTRACT

The Earth on Trial examines the degree to which the law has accommodated an increased understanding of the natural environment. Paul Stanton Kibel provides a clear assessment of what conceptual and practical changes are needed to reconcile law to the limits of ecology. By moving the debate between law and the environment beyond specialists, and towards a public forum, The Earth on Trial acknowledges that a healthy environmental future depends not so much on our ability to alter nature to accommodate society, as our ability to alter society to accommodate nature.

chapter |4 pages

Part I. THE AMERICAN BACKYARD

chapter 1|26 pages

City Limits

Urban Ecology and Economic Justice

chapter 2|10 pages

Roughshod

Northwest Forests and the Constitution

chapter 3|8 pages

Blaming Wildlife: The Endangered Endangered Species Act

The Endangered Endangered Species

chapter 4|6 pages

Words to Choke On

Free Speech and Environmental Debate

chapter 5|6 pages

Ignorance Abroad

International Projects Under National Law

chapter |4 pages

Part II. FOREIGN SOIL

chapter 6|16 pages

Axe to the Myth

Canadian Logging and International Law

chapter 7|18 pages

Ecology after the USSR

Hard Times for Russian Environmental Law

chapter 8|6 pages

United By Poison

Relief for Bhopal’s Victims

chapter 9|8 pages

Refoliating Vietnam

A Second War for the Forests

chapter |4 pages

Part III. TRADE’S HARVEST

chapter 10|10 pages

A Difficult Swim

The Sea Turtle Navigates GATT

chapter 11|12 pages

Trees Falling

Forests and the Timber Trade

chapter 12|10 pages

The Depths of Europe

Lessons for North America

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion

Commonplace Ideas

chapter |10 pages

Selected Resource Guide

Publications

chapter |4 pages

Selected Bibliography

chapter |4 pages

Suggested Further Reading