追求可持续发展的未来和密歇根法律新期刊的曙光

David M. Uhlmann
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引用次数: 1

摘要

当我2007年加入密歇根大学法学院时,我给环境法和政策课的学生布置的第一项作业是约翰·麦克菲的《与大德鲁伊的相遇》。对他们来说,这一定是一个奇怪的选择,尤其是来自一个三个月前刚刚担任美国司法部环境犯罪科主任的教授。这本书并不是关于法庭斗争的戏剧性故事。事实上,这本书甚至都不是关于法律的,它所描述的环境价值观的冲突早于作为课程重点的环境法规。《与大德鲁伊相遇》记录了麦克菲在20世纪60年代与大卫·布罗尔(Sierra Club的第一任执行董事,也是他那一代最有影响力的环保活动家之一)一起组织的郊游。当我们仍然相信在美国一切皆有可能,相信美国拥有无穷无尽的自然资源来支持经济增长的时候,布劳尔是一位毫无悔意的环保倡导者。麦克菲将布劳尔与三个对我们与环境的关系有着截然不同看法的对手配对:查尔斯·帕克,斯坦福大学地球科学学院的前院长,也是在喀斯喀特山脉采矿的支持者;南卡罗来纳州希尔顿黑德岛(Hilton Head Island)的开发商查尔斯·弗雷泽(Charles Fraser)也有类似的计划,要开发乔治亚州海岸外的坎伯兰岛(Cumberland Island);弗洛伊德·多明尼是垦务局不屈不挠的局长,他想在科罗拉多河附近修建大坝。《与大德鲁伊相遇》中的故事发生在四十多年前,但我把这本书交给我的学生,既是因为它的历史背景,也是因为它所描述的关于我们环境价值观的分歧在今天仍然存在。当他们在喀斯喀特山脉徒步旅行时,布罗尔和帕克争论是否应该允许在冰川峰附近的受保护荒野中开采铜矿。布罗尔观察到,喀斯喀特山脉是“美国本土仅存的几处大荒野之一”,他问道:“美国要想让它最美丽的荒野不被破坏,就必须放弃很多东西吗?”朴槿惠反驳说:“矿物在哪里就在哪里。这些量是有限的。当人民的生活水平依赖于矿物时,浪费矿物是犯罪行为。”对于任何关注过关于在北极国家野生动物保护区(ANWR)钻探提议的争论的人来说,冲突和语言都是熟悉的(只不过现在争论的是石油而不是铜,荒野在阿拉斯加而不是华盛顿)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Quest for a Sustainable Future and the Dawn of a New Journal at Michigan Law
When I joined the faculty of the University of Michigan Law School in 2007, the first assignment I gave students in my Environmental Law and Policy class was John McPhee's Encounters with the Archdruid. It must have seemed like a curious choice to them, particularly coming from a professor who just three months earlier had been the Chief of the Environmental Crimes Section at the U.S. Department of Justice. The book was not a dramatic tale of courtroom battles. In fact, the book was not even about the law, and the clash of environmental values it depicted pre-dated the environmental statutes that were the focus of the course. Encounters with the Archdruid chronicles outings McPhee organized during the 1960s with David Brower, the first Executive Director of the Sierra Club and one of the most influential environmental activists of his generation. Brower was an unapologetic advocate for conservation at a time when we still believed that anything was possible in the United States and that America had an endless bounty of natural resources to support economic growth. McPhee paired Brower with three antagonists who had very different ideas about our relationship with the environment: Charles Park, the former Dean of Stanford University's School of Earth Sciences and a proponent of mining in the Cascade mountains; Charles Fraser, the developer of Hilton Head Island in South Carolina, who had similar plans to develop Cumberland Island off the Georgia coast; and Floyd Dominy, the indomitable Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation, who wanted to dam the Colorado River near the Grand Canyon. The stories in Encounters with the Archdruid occurred more than forty years ago, but I assigned the book to my students both for historical context and because the disagreements it describes about our environmental values remain potent today. As they hiked in the Cascades, Brower and Park argued about whether copper mining should be allowed in protected wilderness near Glacier Peak. Brower observed that the Cascades are "one of the few remaining great wildernesses in the lower forty-eight" and asked, "Would America have to go without much to leave its finest wilderness unspoiled?" Park countered that "[m]inerals are where you find them. The quantities are finite. It's criminal to waste minerals when the standard of living of your people depends upon them." For anyone who has followed the debate over proposals to drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), the conflict and the language are familiar (only now the argument is about oil rather than copper, and the wilderness is in Alaska instead of Washington).
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