Courses 2011 - 2012
LAW B565 U.S. Coastal And Ocean Law Seminar
Credits: 3-5, Variable
The U.S. has more than 95,000 miles of coastline. The U.S. marine exclusive economic zone is the largest and arguably the richest in the world. Those waters support a diverse ecosystem, serve as a vital highway for waterborne trade, produce much needed food and energy and provide unparalleled recreation opportunities. Increasingly, however, U.S. coastal and marine ecosystems are coming under increasing stress from conflicting use of waterways, habitat alterations, overfishing and pollution. This course examines U.S. constitutional, statutory and common law sources that govern multiple uses of the coastal and ocean zone and its resources. Prerequisites: Open to graduate and law students only. Students must have completed one of the following: Constitutional Law I (Law A 507), International Law of the Sea (Law B 561); Introduction to Marine Affairs, or Administrative Law (Law B 509, SMA 476 or PBAF 505).
Spring,
4 Credit(s)
Course Sections and Instructors
| Instructor(s) |
Rodgers, William, Usha Varanasi
| Quarter | Instructor | Schedule - Days, Hour, Room) | Sec SLN Type |
| Spring |
Rodgers
Varanasi
|
| MW |
8:30-10:20 |
127 |
|
| F |
8:30-10:20 |
127 |
| 4/13,27 |
|
A 19906 JD
|
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Room assignments are not posted until 30 days before the start of the quarter and are subject to change without notice.
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