Ocean and Coastal Law Center Faculty Works

Permanent URI for this collection

This collection contains publications by law faculty affiliated with the Ocean and Coastal Law Center. Except as otherwise indicated, visitors should assume that items are copyrighted by the author.

For additional publications by center faculty, see http://oceanlaw.uoregon.edu/publications/.

Browse

Recent Submissions

Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
  • ItemOpen Access
    Potential enforcement mechanisms for nonpoint source pollution controls
    (Ocean and Coastal Law Center, School of Law, University of Oregon, 1996-06-30) Hildreth, Richard G.
    In December 1994 the federal Environmental Protections Agency's Region 10 published "A Watershed Assessment Primer" (EPA 910-B-94-005). Appendix C of that report by this author, Mara Brown, and Robert Shavelson was an in-depth "Legal and Policy Analysis for Integrated Watershed Management, Cumulative Impacts, and Implementation of Non-Point Source Controls." This guidance report clarifies what legal authorities exist to comply with nonpoint source (NPS) pollution controls and evaluates federal and state NPS programs, statutes and regulations, local ordinances, case law, and a wide variety of secondary sources.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Ocean resources and intergovernmental relations in the 1980's : Outer continental shelf hydrocarbons and minerals
    (Ocean and Coastal Law Center, School of Law, University of Oregon, 1985-09-12) Hildreth, Richard G.
    The author utilizes the legal indicia, primary court opinions, of federal-state conflict over outer continental shelf oil and gas development in the 1980's to support more general observations about intergovernmental relations offshore.
  • ItemRestricted
    Place-Based Ocean Management: Emerging U.S. Law and Practice
    (2007-11) Hildreth, Richard G.
    Marine protected areas and marine reserves are being established in United States ocean waters under several federal and state laws. This article evaluates U.S. place-based ocean management from the perspectives of relevant international law principles and programs and foreign nation experiences relevant to the U.S. It then focuses on the challenges presented in managing multiple uses of U.S. ocean waters in the face of federal and state jurisdictional complexity. Integrating place-based management with fisheries management is given special attention.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Evaluation of the New Carissa Incident for Improvements to State, Federal, and International Law
    (Ocean and Coastal Law Center, School of Law, University of Oregon, 2000-10) Hildreth, Richard G.
    The New Carissa's 1999 groundings and oil spills on the Oregon coast tested state, federal, and international laws, regulations, and procedures designed to prevent such incidents or, when they do occur, to provide effective responses. This report evaluates the adequacy of that legal framework and recommends changes at the state, federal, and international levels.