In the shadow of the Supreme Court\u27s constitutional federalism doctrines, lower federal courts have developed doctrines of common law federalism through vehicles such as abstention. In the environmental law arena, courts have employed a number of abstention theories to dismiss citizen suits brought under federal statutes. The appearance of primary jurisdiction and Burford abstention in citizen suits brought under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act ( RCRA ) exemplifies this trend. In rejecting RCRA suits, some courts have relied on primary jurisdiction, a doctrine conceived as a mechanism to allocate responsibility for limited fact-finding between courts and agencies, to dismiss RCRA citizen suits. These courts have emphasized the...
The current Supreme Court has substantially expanded the scope of protection from lawsuits accorded ...
Equitable abstention refers to the deference a federal court will give a state tribunal to determine...
The Emergency Planning and Community Right-To-Know Act (EPCRA) mandates that companies using and sto...
In the shadow of the Supreme Court\u27s constitutional federalism doctrines, lower federal courts ha...
Throughout the history of federal statutory environmental law, citizen suits have played a key role ...
The United States Supreme Court held that the sixty-day notice and delay requirement of the citizen ...
The citizen suit provision of the Clean Air Act (CAA) gives standing to citizen groups to bring suit...
The Supreme Court’s decisions under the pollution control statutes administered by the Environmental...
The U.S. Supreme Court has given federal courts the authority to abstain from hearing certain cases ...
Congress regularly, and with increasing frequency, removes jurisdiction from the federal courts. Thi...
This article discusses the problems of splitting a cause of action between state and federal courts ...
Congress creates a federal right of action for private citizens in two ways. First, Congress can exp...
The abstention doctrine articulated by the Supreme Court in 1941 in Railroad Commission of Texas v. ...
States routinely contest federal jurisdiction when a state tax is challenged in federal district cou...
The U.S. Supreme Court, through its statutory and constitutional interpretations, has revived fede...
The current Supreme Court has substantially expanded the scope of protection from lawsuits accorded ...
Equitable abstention refers to the deference a federal court will give a state tribunal to determine...
The Emergency Planning and Community Right-To-Know Act (EPCRA) mandates that companies using and sto...
In the shadow of the Supreme Court\u27s constitutional federalism doctrines, lower federal courts ha...
Throughout the history of federal statutory environmental law, citizen suits have played a key role ...
The United States Supreme Court held that the sixty-day notice and delay requirement of the citizen ...
The citizen suit provision of the Clean Air Act (CAA) gives standing to citizen groups to bring suit...
The Supreme Court’s decisions under the pollution control statutes administered by the Environmental...
The U.S. Supreme Court has given federal courts the authority to abstain from hearing certain cases ...
Congress regularly, and with increasing frequency, removes jurisdiction from the federal courts. Thi...
This article discusses the problems of splitting a cause of action between state and federal courts ...
Congress creates a federal right of action for private citizens in two ways. First, Congress can exp...
The abstention doctrine articulated by the Supreme Court in 1941 in Railroad Commission of Texas v. ...
States routinely contest federal jurisdiction when a state tax is challenged in federal district cou...
The U.S. Supreme Court, through its statutory and constitutional interpretations, has revived fede...
The current Supreme Court has substantially expanded the scope of protection from lawsuits accorded ...
Equitable abstention refers to the deference a federal court will give a state tribunal to determine...
The Emergency Planning and Community Right-To-Know Act (EPCRA) mandates that companies using and sto...