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Conclusion: Adjudicating climate change across scales
Hari M. Osofsky
*
*
Corresponding author for this work
Northwestern University School of Law
Research output
:
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
›
Chapter
6
Scopus citations
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Dive into the research topics of 'Conclusion: Adjudicating climate change across scales'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Earth and Planetary Sciences
Book
16%
Climate
16%
Climate Change
100%
Court
16%
Decision
16%
Election
16%
Emissions
16%
Environmental Law
16%
Focusing
16%
Gore
16%
Greenhouse Gas Emission
16%
Impact
66%
Implication
16%
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
16%
Landscape
16%
Litigation
100%
Massachusetts
16%
Participation
16%
Policy
16%
Public
16%
Regulatory Approach
16%
State
16%
Task
16%
Treaty
16%
United States of America
33%
Variation
16%
Vehicle
16%
View
16%
Volume
16%
Social Sciences
Analysis
16%
Approach
16%
Awards
16%
Books
16%
Climate
16%
Climate Change
100%
Commitment
16%
Entrustable Professional Activity
16%
Environmental Legislation
16%
Evolution
16%
Forestry Worker
16%
Gases
16%
Identity
16%
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
16%
Introduction
16%
Landscape
16%
Legal Decision
16%
Legal Procedure
100%
Negotiation
16%
Occupations
16%
Peace
16%
Policy
16%
President
16%
Social Participation
16%
State
16%
Vehicles
16%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Awareness
100%
Electric Potential
100%
Evolution
100%
Gas
100%
Regulatory Mechanism
100%
Volume
100%
INIS
climates
14%
climatic change
100%
courts
14%
emission
28%
epa
14%
greenhouse gases
14%
legal aspects
28%
levels
14%
litigation
85%
massachusetts
14%
negotiation
14%
panels
14%
policy
14%
pollution laws
14%
regulations
14%
treaties
14%
variations
14%
vehicles
14%
volume
14%