Now showing items 1-6 of 6

    • Rossi, Jim (Texas Law Review, 2016)
      For much of the past 80 years courts have fixated on dual sovereignty as the organizing federalism paradigm under New Deal era energy statutes. Dual sovereignty’s reign emphasized a jurisdictional “bright line,” with a ...
    • Rossi, Jim (Minnesota Law Review, 2017)
      This Article argues that, even though a carbon tax remains politically elusive, “carbon taxation by regulation” has begun to flourish as a way of financing carbon reduction. For more than a century, energy rate setting has ...
    • Rossi, Jim; Serkin, Christopher (Cornell Law Review, 2019)
      Exactions are demands levied on residential or commercial developers to force them, rather than a municipality, to bear the costs of new infrastructure. Local governments commonly use them to address the burdens that growth ...
    • Rossi, Jim (Case Western Law Review, 2014)
      While the federal government has been slow to address problems such as climate change, many states have adopted innovative approaches to address the climate impact of using natural resources to produce energy, including ...
    • Rossi, Jim; Klass, Alexandra B. (Minnesota Law Review, 2015)
      Interstate coordination presents one of the most difficult challenges for American federalism as well as for energy markets and policy. Existing laws vest the approval of large-scale energy infrastructure projects such as ...
    • Vandenbergh, Michael P.; Ruhl, J.B.; Rossi, Jim (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2012)
      Like many fields, energy law has had its ups and downs. A period of remarkable activity in the 1970s and early 1980s focused on the efficiencies arising from deregulation of energy markets, but the field attracted much ...