>>24794123>>24794149
link to the enviromental law institutue below.
it is called critical legal theory. similar to critical race theory - subverting and twisting law and order with insurgency.
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https://www.eli.org/about-environmental-law-institute
About the Environmental Law Institute
“I wanted to say to ELI, what a great partner you have been in bringing along all these lawyers that are part and parcel of what ELI stands for. I think that’s been a magnificent part of the building of the environmental movement. That’s where the rubber meets the road. I greatly appreciate what you folks have done.”
— John Adams, former President, Natural Resources Defense Council
Overview
The Environmental Law Institute (ELI) makes law work for people, places, and the planet.
ELI’s Vision is “a healthy environment, prosperous economies, and vibrant communities founded on the rule of law.”
ELI’s Mission is to foster innovative, just, and practical law and policy solutions to enable leaders across borders and sectors to make environmental, economic, and social progress. ELI:
Builds the skills and capacity of tomorrow’s leaders and institutions
Researches and analyzes complex and pressing environmental challenges
Promotes and disseminates the best thinking through print and electronic media
Convenes people with diverse perspectives to build understanding through robust debate
ELI recently sat down with the folks at Great.com to talk about how ELI is making law work for people, places and the planet. Watch or listen here.
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Convening Diverse Groups to Solve Problems: We put the right people in a room together with a clear objective, strong preparation, and quality facilitation. For example, we convene scientists and journalists to work through the challenges of reporting on climate change data and bring together state and local public health officials from across the country to identify solutions to indoor environmental quality problems. We convene professionals representing divergent perspectives on important policy questions to build bridges, foster common understanding, and explore areas of ultimate agreement.
The Institute is governed by a board of directors who represent a diverse mix of leaders within the environmental profession and others who support strengthening environmental law and policy. Support for the Institute comes from individuals, foundations, government, corporations, law firms, and other sources.