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- catalog abstract ""Earthjustice has represented thousands of clients in court, from Native American tribes to hunters and fishermen, from the Maine Lobsterman's Association to the Gray Wolf Committee of Idaho, from People Against Chlordane (New York) to the Hana Community Association of Hawaiì, from Friends of the Sea Otter (California) to Friends of the Horsepasture (North Carolina). This book details a handful of important cases Earthjustice has pursued in the last decade - a time in which its focus has shifted slightly from preserving pristine landscapes to restoring damaged ones, and to working on behalf of communities threatened by environmental harm." "One chapter recounts a monumental crusade to stop a mining giant from reopening an old, bleeding gold mine on the border of Yellowstone National Park. Another describes efforts to heal a California river ravaged by logging and road building. In Washington, D.C., Earthjustice lawyers banded with groups in the poorer southeast neighborhoods to block massive unnecessary development along the Anacostia River. In rural northern Louisiana, it helped two tiny African-American communities stop a uranium processing plant from being built nearly on top of them. And from Hawaiì comes news of a campaign to restore water stolen from Windward Oàhu and piped eastward to grow sugar, wreaking havoc on native Hawaiian communities nearly a century ago." "The stories are illustrated by photographs from leading nature and wildlife photographers such as Robert Glenn Ketchum, Galen Rowell, and Carr Clifton, as well as documentary images of the places, people, and activities portrayed. Graceful and accurate watercolor maps orient the reader in each chapter."--Jacket.".
- catalog contributor b12808194.
- catalog created "c2002.".
- catalog date "2002".
- catalog date "c2002.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c2002.".
- catalog description ""Earthjustice has represented thousands of clients in court, from Native American tribes to hunters and fishermen, from the Maine Lobsterman's Association to the Gray Wolf Committee of Idaho, from People Against Chlordane (New York) to the Hana Community Association of Hawaiì, from Friends of the Sea Otter (California) to Friends of the Horsepasture (North Carolina). This book details a handful of important cases Earthjustice has pursued in the last decade - a time in which its focus has shifted slightly from preserving pristine landscapes to restoring damaged ones, and to working on behalf of communities threatened by environmental harm." "One chapter recounts a monumental crusade to stop a mining giant from reopening an old, bleeding gold mine on the border of Yellowstone National Park. Another describes efforts to heal a California river ravaged by logging and road building. In Washington, D.C., Earthjustice lawyers banded with groups in the poorer southeast neighborhoods to block massive unnecessary development along the Anacostia River. In rural northern Louisiana, it helped two tiny African-American communities stop a uranium processing plant from being built nearly on top of them. And from Hawaiì comes news of a campaign to restore water stolen from Windward Oàhu and piped eastward to grow sugar, wreaking havoc on native Hawaiian communities nearly a century ago." "The stories are illustrated by photographs from leading nature and wildlife photographers such as Robert Glenn Ketchum, Galen Rowell, and Carr Clifton, as well as documentary images of the places, people, and activities portrayed. Graceful and accurate watercolor maps orient the reader in each chapter."--Jacket.".
- catalog description "Foreword: The court of last resort / Bill McKibben -- Environmental law in the twenty-first century -- The case of the spring in the road -- No nukes in Claiborne Parish -- Return of the windward waters -- Making the Garcia safe for salmon -- Of robber barons, gators, and greed -- The battle for the last big trees -- A tale of two rivers -- Timber reform in the Tongass -- The trouble with trade -- Afterword: Closing the courthouse doors / Vawter Parker -- Appendices: Citations to cases mentioned -- Earthjustice trustees, clients, and officers.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 218-219) and index.".
- catalog extent "223 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Justice on earth.".
- catalog identifier "1931498318 :".
- catalog isFormatOf "Justice on earth.".
- catalog issued "2002".
- catalog issued "c2002.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Oakland, Calif. : Earthjustice : White River Junction, Vt. : Chelsea Green Pub. Co. [distributor],".
- catalog relation "Justice on earth.".
- catalog spatial "United States.".
- catalog subject "Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund.".
- catalog subject "Environmental law United States.".
- catalog subject "KF5635 .T87 2002".
- catalog subject "Nature conservation Law and legislation United States.".
- catalog subject "Nature conservation United States.".
- catalog subject "Wilderness areas Law and legislation United States.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Foreword: The court of last resort / Bill McKibben -- Environmental law in the twenty-first century -- The case of the spring in the road -- No nukes in Claiborne Parish -- Return of the windward waters -- Making the Garcia safe for salmon -- Of robber barons, gators, and greed -- The battle for the last big trees -- A tale of two rivers -- Timber reform in the Tongass -- The trouble with trade -- Afterword: Closing the courthouse doors / Vawter Parker -- Appendices: Citations to cases mentioned -- Earthjustice trustees, clients, and officers.".
- catalog title "Justice on earth : Earthjustice and the people it has served / Tom Turner.".
- catalog type "text".