In late 2019, the Oregon Supreme Court decided the Oswego Lake case, concerning public access rights to the State’s only allegedly “private” lake, located in suburban Portland. The court’s unanimous decision was pathbreaking for it interpreted the State’s public trust doctrine, for the first time, to apply to uplands adjacent to navigable waters necessary for accessing those waters. The court also clarified that the doctrine applies to fish and wildlife, and to local governments as well as the State, and invoked private trust principles in articulating public trust duties. The plaintiffs achieved all these results over the objections of the State, which has long sought a narrow judicial interpretation of the doctrine’s public rights. Howeve...
Wisconsin has a particularly notable tradition of using the public trust doctrine aggressively to pr...
This Article looks at the relationship between state environmental rights statutes and the common la...
The paper focuses on the interaction between Oregon\u27s public trust doctrine, city ordinances, and...
Oregon’s public trust doctrine has been misunderstood. The doctrine has not been judicially interpre...
Dean Jim Huffman’s recent article in Environmental Law on the Oswego Lake decision claims that the O...
Courts largely view the public trust doctrine as limited by state legislative and executive policy. ...
The modern public trust doctrine compels each Great Lakes state to protect the sustainable future of...
Following decades of neglecting its public trust duties, Washington now accepts the public trust doc...
This article explores the development of public trust principles from early Roman and British law th...
Utah Lake, the largest freshwater lake in the third driest state, is a vital, yet underappreciated n...
Under the public trust doctrine, a state must hold certain types of natural resources, most particul...
This article tells the epic tale of the fall and rise of Mono Lake — the strange and beautiful Dead ...
Walker Lake, a terminal desert lake in western Nevada’s Mineral County, was once home to a thriving ...
This Article partners a summary of the Mono Lake story — one of the all-time great tales of environm...
Water rights in America, particularly in western states, have been a pervasive source of legal conte...
Wisconsin has a particularly notable tradition of using the public trust doctrine aggressively to pr...
This Article looks at the relationship between state environmental rights statutes and the common la...
The paper focuses on the interaction between Oregon\u27s public trust doctrine, city ordinances, and...
Oregon’s public trust doctrine has been misunderstood. The doctrine has not been judicially interpre...
Dean Jim Huffman’s recent article in Environmental Law on the Oswego Lake decision claims that the O...
Courts largely view the public trust doctrine as limited by state legislative and executive policy. ...
The modern public trust doctrine compels each Great Lakes state to protect the sustainable future of...
Following decades of neglecting its public trust duties, Washington now accepts the public trust doc...
This article explores the development of public trust principles from early Roman and British law th...
Utah Lake, the largest freshwater lake in the third driest state, is a vital, yet underappreciated n...
Under the public trust doctrine, a state must hold certain types of natural resources, most particul...
This article tells the epic tale of the fall and rise of Mono Lake — the strange and beautiful Dead ...
Walker Lake, a terminal desert lake in western Nevada’s Mineral County, was once home to a thriving ...
This Article partners a summary of the Mono Lake story — one of the all-time great tales of environm...
Water rights in America, particularly in western states, have been a pervasive source of legal conte...
Wisconsin has a particularly notable tradition of using the public trust doctrine aggressively to pr...
This Article looks at the relationship between state environmental rights statutes and the common la...
The paper focuses on the interaction between Oregon\u27s public trust doctrine, city ordinances, and...