马丁海滩诉讼和侵蚀公众进入加利福尼亚海岸的权利

IF 0.3 4区 社会学 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Paul Balmer
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引用次数: 2

摘要

马丁海滩(Martin’s Beach)是位于加州太平洋沿岸半月湾(Half Moon Bay)以南的一片私人拥有的、崎岖不平、上镜的沙滩,已成为这个不断变化的州的一个热点。2009年,亿万富翁维诺德·科斯拉(Vinod khosla)——马丁海滩及其周边地产的新主人——关闭了马丁海滩的对外开放,环保主义者、冲浪者和当地政府联手恢复了对公众的开放。由于海平面上升,海岸线不断缩小,全州人口不断增长和多样化,财富差距不断扩大,这些都使公众进入马丁海滩的斗争几乎成为一种存在主义的观点:谁真正享有去海滩的权利,能待多久?几代人以来,加州举世闻名的海滩一直是该州文化和居民身份的特色。保护所有加州人享受海滩权利的运动在1972年通过的第20号提案中达到高潮,该提案规定公众可以进入整个海岸,并试图保护海滩不受开发活动的侵占几十年后,保护进入海滩的斗争在法庭上再次上演,因为海岸上下的少数富人试图限制公众进入海滩,侵蚀加州生活的一个基本组成部分最近两起案件的判决——这是正在纠缠不休的诉讼中的最新一起——使加州人进入海滩的权利处于危险之中。在马丁海滩之友诉马丁海滩第一有限责任公司(朋友一和朋友二)一案中,两个独立的法院发现,历史上不存在公众进入的权利
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Martin's Beach Litigation and Eroding Public Access Rights to the California Coast
Martin’s Beach, a privately owned, rugged, photogenic strip of sand south of Half Moon Bay on California’s Pacific coast, has become a flashpoint for a changing state. When billionaire Vinod Khosla—new owner of the beach and abutting property—closed Martin’s Beach to the public in 2009, environmentalists, surfers, and local government joined forces to restore public access. Shrinking coastline due to sea-level rise, a growing and diversifying statewide population, and widening wealth disparities cast the fight for public access to Martin’s Beach in an almost existential light: Who really enjoys the right to go to the beach, and for how much longer? For generations, California’s world-famous beaches have been endemic to the culture of the state and the identity of its residents. The movement to protect the rights of all Californians to enjoy the beach culminated in the 1972 passage of Proposition 20, which mandated public access to the entire coast and sought to protect the beaches from encroaching development.1 Decades later, the fight to protect access has been renewed in the courtroom, as a handful of wealthy individuals up and down the coast have sought to limit public beach access and erode a fundamental part of California life.2 Recent decisions in two cases—the latest in an ongoing tangle of litigation—leave the right of Californians to access beaches in jeopardy. In Friends of Martin’s Beach v. Martin’s Beach 1, LLC (Friends I and Friends II), two separate courts found that there was no historical right of public access to
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: Ecology Law Quarterly"s primary function is to produce two high quality journals: a quarterly print version and a more frequent, cutting-edge online journal, Ecology Law Currents. UC Berkeley School of Law students manage every aspect of ELQ, from communicating with authors to editing articles to publishing the journals. In addition to featuring work by leading environmental law scholars, ELQ encourages student writing and publishes student pieces.
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