University of Montana

University of Montana School of Law
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    2191 research outputs found

    PREVIEW—Park County Environmental Council v. Montana Department of Environmental Quality: A Test of Montana’s Right to a Clean and Healthful Environment

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    The Supreme Court of Montana will hear oral arguments in this matter on Wednesday, September 30, 2020, at 9:30 a.m. in the Mazurek Justice Building in Helena, Montana. This case challenges a key provision of Montana’s bedrock environmental law—the Montana Environmental Policy Act (“MEPA”)—and tests the judicial power of the state’s constitutional right to a clean and healthful environment to issue injunctions to prevent environmental harm

    Bullock v. United States Bureau of Land Mgmt.

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    A Montana District Court ruled that William Perry Pendley unlawfully served as the Director of BLM for 424 days and cast doubt on the legality of many BLM decisions made during that period. The ruling took a stronger stand against the Trump administration’s liberal and brash use of acting appointees than other, similar cases have

    Alice Creek

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    A Third Way: Decolonizing the Laws of Indigenous Cultural Protection

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    In A Third Way, Hillary Hoffmann and Monte Mills detail the history, context, and future of the ongoing legal fight to protect indigenous cultures. At the federal level, this fight is shaped by the assumptions that led to current federal cultural protection laws, which many tribes and their allies are now reframing to better meet their cultural and sovereign priorities. At the state level, centuries of antipathy toward tribes are beginning to give way to collaborative and cooperative efforts that better reflect indigenous interests. Most critically, tribes themselves are building laws and legal structures that reflect and invigorate their own cultural values. Taken together, and evidenced by the recent worldwide support for indigenous cultural movements, events of the last decade signal a new era for indigenous cultural protection. This important work should be read by anyone interested in the legal reforms that will guide progress toward that future. Makes federal, state, and tribal cultural resource protection laws easy to understand by separating them into individual chapters and illustrating how they affect specific tribes Examines the major tribal cultural protection efforts of the 2000s, such as Dakota Access Pipeline protests and the creation of the Bears Ears National Monument Allows readers to gain a foundation in federal Indian lawhttps://scholarship.law.umt.edu/faculty_books/1010/thumbnail.jp

    The Other Non-Renewable Resource: Cultural Resource Protection in a Changing Energy Future

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    Polly Holmes: When The Smoke Began To Clear

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    Alice Creek — 1970 Montana Confronts The Copper Giant

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    A Little History And A Few Of Its Heroes

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    Northern Plains Resource Council v. United States Army Corps of Engineers

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    Environmental activist and indigenous rights groups have challenged the validity of the Keystone XL Pipeline since its initial approval in 2010. In April 2020, less than a month after crews broke ground, the opposing groups notched a major win when the United States District Court for the District of Montana revoked a key permit for the project on the grounds that the United States Army Corps of Engineers had inadequately assessed the pipeline’s impact on endangered species

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    University of Montana School of Law is based in United States
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