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Tuesday, July 25, 2023

CFP: Environmental History, Legal History, and Environmental Law – Two Transdisciplinary Conversations


Susan Bartie (ANU), Ben Pontin (Cardiff), and I are organizing a double session on environment, law, and history for the 4th World Congress of Environmental History, to be held (in hybrid format) in Oulu, Finland, 19-23 August 2024. This double session will showcase environmental-legal-historical research that demonstrates the opportunities as well as the challenges inherent in this meeting of disciplines, and discuss strategies, theories, and research methods that might help in overcoming these challenges. The sessions' abstract is below.

If you're interested in joining (in person or remotely, you need not decide now), please submit a proposal through this link by 18 September 2023. Please indicate in your submission whether you wish to propose a traditional research paper (the first session) or make a presentation as part of the roundtable (second session).

Abstract:

The triangle ‘environment–history–law’ suggests a wealth of opportunities for productive transdisciplinary scholarship: Historical analysis of environmental law, environmental histories of legal change, legal histories of the environment, etc. Yet such transdisciplinary projects have to date been tentative and largely tangential to the thriving fields of environmental history, legal history, and environmental law. Legal history, while having moved beyond its previously narrow focus on legal doctrine to embrace wider contexts of society, economy, and culture, has to date remained largely indifferent to environmental issues or to the environment as a category of analysis. The field of environmental law, so salient in pressing issues such as climate change and biodiversity conservation, tends to see itself as brand new, overlooking centuries of environmental laws. And while environmental histories frequently reference legal issues and institutions, from common property to rights of nature, they are often insensitive to the legal context in which these institutions operate.

The first session will showcase new environmental-legal-historical research that demonstrates both the opportunities and challenges inherent in this meeting of disciplines. The following, roundtable session will bring together scholars working across the boundaries of environment, history, and law, in order to discuss the challenges facing this intersection of disciplines, from institutional obstacles to the difficulty in meshing historical and normative analysis. With the participation of the audience, it will seek to identify strategies, theories, and methods that might help in overcoming these challenges. Panelists will be drawn from a variety of disciplines, regions, and methodological approaches. 

Sunday, July 23, 2023

The reasonableness standard, Israel's current crisis, and Edward Coke

As protests continue to erupt in Israel over the government's proposal to oust the power of courts to review decisions of the government and its ministers for reasonableness, I thought it worth taking a look at the historical origins of this doctrine in an area of particular interest to this blog - water law.

Israeli administrative law's reasonableness standard was inherited from the British, who ruled Palestine from 1917 to 1948 and imported much English law and legal culture to the middle eastern jurisdiction. In the 1928 Supreme Court case of AG v Altshuler ([1920-1933] PLR 273), for instance, the court held that a municipal bylaw of Tel Aviv was invalid due to unreasonableness, relying on the English precedent of Kruse v Johnson ([1898] 2 QB 91).

Sir Edward Coke
As many will know, the reasonableness standard was apparently introduced to English law by the 1598 decision of the Court of Common Pleas in Rooke's Case (5 Co Rep 99b, 77 Eng Rep 209). At issue was the power given to the Commissioners of Sewers by statute (the 1531 Statute of Sewers) to assess lands adjoining water courses in order to fund the building of works to protect adjacent lands from flooding. The Commissioners assessed a certain Carter, who had seven acres of land flood-prone adjoining the Thames, with the costs of repairing the banks of the river along a long segment of the river, leaving a further 800 acres, possessed by others and similarly threatened by the waters, free of charge. In their defence, the Commissioners pointed to the language of the statute (s 3), which gave them the power to make repairs 'as Case shall require, after your Wisdoms and Discretions'. Edward Coke's report explained what he saw as the rationale behund the court's rejection of this claim:

Notwithstanding the words of the commission give authority to the commissioners to do according to their discretions, yet their proceedings ought to be limited and bound with the rule of reason and law [emphasis added - DS]. For discretion is a science or understanding to discern between falsity and truth, between wrong and right, between shadows and substance, between equity and colourable glosses and pretences, and not to do according to their wills and private affections ; for as one saith, talis discretio discretionem confundit [such discretion confuses discretion].

So administrative discretion, explained Coke, must be subject to 'the rule of reason and law'.

One might have legitimate criticisms of the way the reasonableness standard is currently applied in Israeli law, but it is clear that the current government's main motivation in its proposed legislation is simply the desire to be free of the rule of reason and law - which explains why there are hundreds of thousands of us out on the street protesting...