Gabriela Cano, Colegio de Mexico, Género y memoria de la Revolución Mexicana Margaret Chowning, UC Berkeley Gender, Politics, and the Catholic Church between 1810 and 1910 Edward Wright-Rios, Vanderbilt University, Fitting Fanáticas: Nation, Narration, and Assimilation of Pious Femininity in Revolutionary Mexico
Make-up session: Grandfathering and New Source Review
Instructor Holly Doremus. This introductory course is designed to explore fundamental legal and policy issues in environmental law. Through examination of environmental common law and key federal environmental statutes, including the National Environmental Policy Act, Clean Air Act, and Clean Water Act, it exposes students to the major challenges to environmental law and the principal approaches to meeting those challenges, including litigation, command and control regulation, technology forcing, market incentives, and information disclosure requirements. With the addition of cross-cutting topics such as risk assessment and environmental federalism, it also gives students a grounding in how choices about regulatory standards and levels of regulatory authority are made.
http://www.law.berkeley.edu/students/curricularprograms/envirolaw/index.html
October 12, 2009
Prof. Bob Infelise discusses National Ambient Air Quality Standards; Implementing the NAAQS: State Implementation Plans.
For more information on key environmental issues, visit Berkeley Law's environmental blog, http://legalplanet.wordpress.com/, or the Video and Audio Resources page, http://www.law.berkeley.edu/2866.htm.
How did California’s “top-two” electoral system play out in this election? Did it produce results in legislative or congressional races that were different than we would have seen under the old system?
Panelists:
Ruth Bernstein, Principal, EMC Research
Steve Glazer, former Assembly candidate
Eric McGhee, Public Policy Institute of California
Courtni Pugh, Hilltop Public Solutions
Christy Wilson, President and CEO, Wilson Public Affairs
Shaudi Falamaki Fulp, Principal, Fidens Group, and member of the Institute of Governmental Studies National Advisory Council - Moderator
Words In Action: ARABIC
It is a nominal sentence, a poem by Mahmoud
Darwish
Performed by Marica Petrey
Words In Action - A MULTILINGUAL STUDENT PERFORMANCE CELEBRATING LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY AT UC BERKELEY
Chevron Auditorium -- International House Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Words In Action is generously sponsored by the BERKELEY LANGUAGE CENTER