This Article addresses questions of resource allocation and property rights, first, by presenting a brief description of the historical and legal foundation of coastal resource allocation in the United States: the “public trust doctrine.” Second, a survey of the Washington experience demonstrates, surprisingly, that a state whose 2,337 miles of marine coastline approximately equals the length of the entire remaining coastline of the contiguous western United States, has managed to establish a viable and responsive regulatory regime governing coastal resource use with scarcely a mention in its laws of the “public trust doctrine.
In Virginia, private landowners own the land to the Mean Low Water mark (“MLW”), whereas in many coa...
A discussion paper prepared as part of a series of focus groups on the topic of the Public Trust Doc...
The Atlantic coastline of the United States is experiencing sea level rise at a rate higher than the...
This Article addresses questions of resource allocation and property rights, first, by presenting a ...
The public trust doctrine is an ancient doctrine that has recently emerged as a powerful tool to pro...
Since 1971 the Shoreline Management Act (SMA) has been the dominant legal tool for managing the Wash...
Oregon’s public trust doctrine has been misunderstood. The doctrine has not been judicially interpre...
Under Washington\u27s public trust doctrine, the state retains a jus publicum interest in tidelands,...
Following decades of neglecting its public trust duties, Washington now accepts the public trust doc...
During the past 15 years, in half the United States, more than 100 reported cases involving the publ...
Sustainably managing marine ecosystems has proved nearly impossible, with few success stories. Ecosy...
This Article considers and evaluates the \u27public trust doctrine, one of the most remarkable lega...
In American jurisprudence, the public trust doctrine emerged as a means of protecting certain limite...
This article explores the development of public trust principles from early Roman and British law th...
In American jurisprudence, the public trust doctrine emerged as a means of protecting certain limite...
In Virginia, private landowners own the land to the Mean Low Water mark (“MLW”), whereas in many coa...
A discussion paper prepared as part of a series of focus groups on the topic of the Public Trust Doc...
The Atlantic coastline of the United States is experiencing sea level rise at a rate higher than the...
This Article addresses questions of resource allocation and property rights, first, by presenting a ...
The public trust doctrine is an ancient doctrine that has recently emerged as a powerful tool to pro...
Since 1971 the Shoreline Management Act (SMA) has been the dominant legal tool for managing the Wash...
Oregon’s public trust doctrine has been misunderstood. The doctrine has not been judicially interpre...
Under Washington\u27s public trust doctrine, the state retains a jus publicum interest in tidelands,...
Following decades of neglecting its public trust duties, Washington now accepts the public trust doc...
During the past 15 years, in half the United States, more than 100 reported cases involving the publ...
Sustainably managing marine ecosystems has proved nearly impossible, with few success stories. Ecosy...
This Article considers and evaluates the \u27public trust doctrine, one of the most remarkable lega...
In American jurisprudence, the public trust doctrine emerged as a means of protecting certain limite...
This article explores the development of public trust principles from early Roman and British law th...
In American jurisprudence, the public trust doctrine emerged as a means of protecting certain limite...
In Virginia, private landowners own the land to the Mean Low Water mark (“MLW”), whereas in many coa...
A discussion paper prepared as part of a series of focus groups on the topic of the Public Trust Doc...
The Atlantic coastline of the United States is experiencing sea level rise at a rate higher than the...