2005 International Law Conference
February 18, 2005TRANSBOUNDARY FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION: The Role of Law, Process and Lawyers
University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law
Friday/Saturday, February 18-19, 2005
About the Program
Schedule
MCLE Credit
About the Global Center
Campus Directions
Further Information
About the Program
Water resources management has added ecosystem restoration to its traditional supply augmentation and pollution prevention programs. Within the United States, restoration projects are underway in regions as diverse as the Great Lakes, the Columbia Basin and California’s Sacramento and San Joaquin Delta. Around the world, similar efforts are underway.
Lawyers play critical roles in the impetus, the design, and the implementation of these efforts and the judicial, legislative, administrative and collaborative processes which shape them.
But what happens when an ecosystem in need of restoration crosses an international boundary? What peculiar challenges do transboundary freshwater ecosystem restoration programs face? What is the role of lawyers in shaping these programs?
Transboundary Freshwater Ecosystem Restoration: The Role of Law, Process and Lawyers will explore these issues. Day one will generally explore ecosystem restoration law and process issues, using both domestic and transboundary examples. Day two will look specifically at California's largest transnational ecosystem restoration challenge: the Lower Colorado River. In particular, it will explore the interrelationship between the rehabilitation of the Salton Sea and the (potential for) restoration of the Colorado River delta.
MCLE Credits
This program has been approved for Minimum Continuing Legal Education credit by The State Bar of California in the amount of six½ (6.5) hours for Day 1 and six½ (6.5) hours for Day 2. The University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law certifies that this activity conforms to the standards for approved educational activities prescribed by the rules and regulations of The State Bar of California governing minimum continuing legal education.
About the Global Center
The Pacific McGeorge Center for Global Business and Development pursues educational, scholarly and practical initiatives addressing the interface between the global economy and the legal profession. The Center is dedicated on the proposition that attorneys must be educated to think globally if they are to be effective advisers and advocates of governments, business enterprises, nongovernmental organizations and individual clients.
The Center has three principal areas of concern, each of which is the focus of one of the institutes within the Center. The Pacific McGeorge Institute for Global Business examines the legal implications of the globalization of business enterprises and business transactions. The Pacific McGeorge Institute for Sustainable Development undertakes a wide range of projects concerning emerging legal regimes for global resources for sustainable development. The Pacific McGeorge Institute for Development of Legal Infrastructure, a joint institute of the Center and the Capital Center for Government Law and Policy, is concerned with studying – and aiding in the development of – legal infrastructures that are preconditions for global business and economic development.
Elizabeth Rindskopf Parker
Dean
Claude D. Rohwer
Associate Dean, International Programs
Professor Michael P. Malloy
Director of the Center for Global Business and Development and Co-Director of the Institute for Development of Legal Infrastructure
Professor Frank Gevurtz
Director of the Institute for Global Business
Professor Gregory S. Weber
Director of the Institute for Sustainable Development
Professor J. Clark Kelso
Co-Director of the Institute for Development of Legal Infrastructure and Director of the Capital Center for Government Law and Policy
Professor Christine Manolakas
Chair of the Pacific McGeorge International Studies Committee
For More Information, Contact:
Connie Neumann - 916-739-7019 - cneumann@pacific.edu






