PROJECTS
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To further the ENR Program’s mission of “engaging the law to support sustainability on earth,” the Program has developed theme-based projects that draw upon existing faculty strengths and provide synergistic opportunities for: promoting student experience, providing service to the community, reaching out to diverse communities, bringing global content to the curriculum, and bringing intellectual energy to bear on some of the most challenging and cutting-edge environmental issues of our day. The ENR’s five interdisciplinary projects are:
The Conservation Trust Project:
Focusing on public trust theory and private property tools to achieve
landscape conservation
The Global Environmental Democracy Project:
Preparing students to be advocates for global change
The Native Environmental Sovereignty Project:
Examining emerging tribal roles in comanaging lands and resources
The Oceans, Coasts, and Watersheds Project:
Engaging the law to promote sustainability for ocean, coastal, and
freshwater resources
The Sustainable Land Use Project:
Evaluating land use laws, theories, and practices to ensure sustainable
development in our communities
In each of these projects, we take a wide perspective on the issues and integrate traditional course work with more specialized study.
Law students work to advance each of these projects through ENR's Fellows
Program. Each academic year, several second and third year students are
appointed as Fellows and are charged with advancing various aspects of the
program and the five interdisciplinary projects through research, event
planning, and public outreach.
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Chad Marriott
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Mary Anne Nash
Mary Anne is a second year law student at the University of Oregon School of Law. She was raised on a cattle ranch in Millican, Oregon, 30 miles east of Bend, where her parents have a natural beef operation. She graduated summa cum laude from Oregon State University in 2006 with an Honors B.S. in Environmental Economics, Policy and Management and a minor in Natural Resources Law. During college, she interned for Congressman Greg Walden and the US Congress House Resources Committee, both in Washington DC. During the summer of 2007, Mary Anne worked at the law firm of Bryant, Lovlien, & Jarvis in Bend, Oregon, primarily on land use issues. Through these experiences, Mary Anne has become interested in water law and property rights, particularly in the intersection between environmental protection laws and property rights. Outside of law school, she enjoys dancing, being outdoors, and spending time with friends.
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| 2008-09 Fellows: Abby Blodgett, Val Chermok, Andy Engel, Kelly Fahl, Anika Leerssen, Chad Marriott, Mark McLaughlin, Maureen McGee, Mary Anne Nash, Kevin Parks, John-Michael Partesotti, Jocelyn Pease, Michelle Platt, Naomi Rowden, Alison Torbitt, Dawn Winalski |
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