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What is Natural Resources Law?

Robert Fischman
Indiana University School of Law-Bloomington



University of Colorado Law Review, 2007
Indiana Legal Studies Research Paper No. 43

Abstract:     
A recent flurry of new natural resources law casebooks, coming a quarter-century since the publication of the last significant new teaching materials, is an occasion to revisit the boundaries that define the field. The similarities among the casebooks are stronger than their differences, and represent a consensus about what composes natural resources law. The published teaching materials as well as an informal poll of natural resources law professors show a substantial overlap between natural resources and environmental law course coverage. Administrative implementation of statutes dominates both subjects. Both courses typically cover environmental impact analysis and endangered species protection. The new casebooks broaden natural resources law coverage to include water rights, wetland development, and other subjects outside of public land management.

Despite the common ground shared with environmental law, natural resources law retains a distinctive character. This article describes four attributes that justify separate pedagogical treatment of natural resources law as a stand-alone course in law schools. First, the in-situ character of extractive activities that dominate natural resources law raises special problems and generates place-based approaches to governance. Second, the deeper roots of natural resources law present particularly vexing interpretive issues for applying the old statutes, deeds, and doctrines to contemporary problems. Third, natural resources law has more experience with ecosystem management. Fourth, despite the now-paramount importance of administrative tools, natural resources law still displays a broader array of property interests that go beyond the variations studied in the first-year property class.

Keywords: natural resources law, public land, environmental law, ecosystem management, and law teaching

JEL Classifications: K32

Accepted Paper Series

Date posted: April 09, 2006 ; Last revised: April 12, 2007

Suggested Citation

Fischman, Robert, What is Natural Resources Law?. University of Colorado Law Review, 2007; Indiana Legal Studies Research Paper No. 43. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=880115


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Robert Fischman (Contact Author)
Indiana University School of Law-Bloomington ( email )
211 S. Indiana Avenue
Bloomington, IN 47405
United States
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