Why Did the Mono Lake Campaign Succeed?

What Makes for Successful Social Movements, Especially in Environmental Politics?

Environmentalists celebrate the campaign to save Mono Lake as one the iconic triumphs in US environmental history.  As well they should.  But why did it succeed?  It's a critical question not just for environmentalists, but for any scholar or member of social movements. In a previous post, I have suggested that the identity of the adversary -- in this case -- the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power -- serves as a key variable.  Arrogant and reactionary, ...

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Conspiracy!

Even as conspiracy theories go, the

Some members of Congress -- not to mention any number of bloggers -- think climate change is a hoax.  Most famously, Senator Inhofe has said: With all of the hysteria, all of the fear, all of the phony science, could it be that manmade global warming is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people? It sure sounds like it. Maybe that shouldn't be too surprising -- conspiracy theories in general have a degree of perennial popularity.  But even if you're a ...

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A Follow-up on the NYT’s Environmental Coverage

Environmental journalism in decline at the NYT

  Last March, the New York Times killed its Green blog and disassembled its environment desk, distributing the staff into other units.  Jayni noted the possible concern that this change might result in diminished resources for environmental coverage at the Times; she also noted the positive spin that some Times people put on the change, that it would “mainstream” environmental coverage into the Times overall news reporting. The Times public editor has don...

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Is Climate Change a Bulldozer or Bullet Train?

How fast will climate change happen? Maybe faster than we expect, according to the National Academy of Sciences.

We're in the early stages of climate change -- just how much depending in large part on whether we control our emissions.  But how quickly will this happen?  Is it a bulldozer we can dodge or a bullet train that's too fast to avoid?  That makes a lot of difference in terms of our ability to adapt to climate change. A recent report from the National Research Council points out that we're already seeing fast changes driven by climate in terms of the rapid disappear...

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What are California Legislators Thinking About Cap-and-Trade?

CA Senate Hearing at UCLA Focuses on Ways to Spend Auction Revenue

Today, UCLA's Emmett Center and IOES hosted a hearing of the Senate Select Committee on Climate Change and AB 32 Implementation with Senators Pavley, Correa, de Leon, deSaulnier, Lieu, and Assemblymember Bloom attending.  The hearing featured testimony on climate science, on AB 32 implementation, and on opportunities to invest revenue from the state's cap-and-trade auctions in ways that create jobs, reduce pollution, and strengthen communities. What drew the legisl...

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COPs: The Erratic Evolution of Global Climate Policy

The latest Conference of the Parties (COP) in Warsaw didn't make headlines -- more like footnotes.  Two things have become clear.  First, the formal UN negotiations are only part of the transnational development of climate policy.  And second, the UN negotiations are moving slowly and fitfully, but they are making progress.  Neither of these things should be surprising.  The UN mechanism is very cumbersome, and it would be crazy to put all our faith in that one ...

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Jeudi Gras – The Great American Holiday

Jeudi Gras means"Fat Thursday" in English.  It would probably be a better name for the holiday than the current one.  Let's face it: for most of us, the day involves a bit of giving thanks and a much larger amount of pigging out like there's no tomorrow.  As the NY Times points out, this wouldn't be great cause for concern except that we have such a large obesity problem to begin with: All told, more than one in three Americans is obese, a fact that as of five y...

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California High Speed Rail Slowed by Court Decisions

Judge rules the train needs a new business plan and project-level environmental review

California Superior Court Judge Michael Kenny dealt two setbacks to high speed rail yesterday that are likely to delay the project significantly.  First, Judge Kenny ruled that the state committee that approved the disbursement of bond money for the project acted without sufficient evidence to justify the disbursal.  California law empowers the High-Speed Passenger Train Finance Committee to authorize the release of $8 billion of the bond funds that voters approved...

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The Significance of EPA’s Proposed Power Plant Standards

Although they won't have immediate impacts, EPA's proposed rules for new coal plants will indirectly help shape the future of the industry.

There's an uproar over EPA's proposed rules for CO2 emissions from new coal plants, even though no one expects anyone to build a new coal plant for at least a decade.  I've argued (here and here) that the industry won't have standing to challenge the rules because they won't have any imminent impact.  In fact, a new report from the Congressional Research Service calls the rules "symbolic," which bolsters my standing argument.  But the body of the report also sugge...

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Passing Gas

A better accounting of GHGs can improve the climate discourse

The tendency to divide global GHG emissions by country is a product of the well-mixed dispersal of most of warming gases, and the international politics that attach to cross-border pollution.  A country’s emission numbers imply accountability and culpability, and frame the discourse on how to respond.  Going forward on policymaking, it’s worth looking at how these emissions are calculated, and whether the numbers cited accurately reflect international accountabil...

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