North Dakota Law

Updates from the University of North Dakota School of Law.

Posts Tagged
Environmental Law

Professor Blake A. Klinkner serves as Chief Judge at 2025 Energy and Mineral Law Moot Court Competition

Categories: Faculty

National Moot Court Competition in Lexington Tackles Complex Legal Questions on Rare Earth Elements, Environmental Law, and Presidential Authority The 2025 Energy and Mineral Law Moot Court Competition brought together top law students from across the United States to the Central Bank Center in Lexington, Kentucky, for a weekend of advocacy. This year, Professor Blake […]

Professor Kimberly Dasse presents “Bloody Hell”: Confronting the Environmental Cost of Menstrual Products at CSLAA conference

Categories: Faculty

Professor Kimberly Dasse makes the case for transparency, sustainability, and change in the menstrual product industry. This past weekend at the CSLAA Conference held in Lawrence Kansas, Professor Kimberly Dasse presented her forthcoming paper, “Bloody Hell: The Environmental Toll of Single-use Menstrual Products and the Case for Change,” sparking urgent conversation about the environmental, health, […]

Grijalva and Jones Present on Public Participation in Tribal Environmental Programs at National Forum

Categories: Faculty

Professor James Grijalva and Visiting Professor Luke Jones recently presented at the 2025 Tribal Lands & Environment Forum, held August 18–21 in Minneapolis. Their presentation, Public Participation in Indian Country Environmental Program Implementation, addressed key legal and administrative issues affecting the effectiveness and accountability of federal environmental programs in Indian country. Together, Grijalva and Jones […]

Professor Grijalva quoted: Native lands lack clean water protections, but more tribes are taking charge

Categories: Faculty

Oct 17, 2023 | 5:00 am ET By Alex Brown Across the roughly 1,300 square miles of the White Earth Indian Reservation in northwest Minnesota, tribal members harvest wild rice in waters that have sustained them for generations. They’ve been working for decades to restore sturgeon, a culturally important fish, and they harvest minnows and leeches […]