Georgetown Environmental Law Review
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- Journal homepage
- Online archive
- Journal page on university website
The Georgetown Environmental Law Review is a quarterly student-edited law review published at Georgetown University Law Center covering the legal implications of environmental issues including: climate change, renewable energy, and the intersection of the environment and international legal areas such as trade, human rights, security, and technology transfer. It was established in 1988 as the Georgetown International Environmental Law Review and obtained its current title in 2015. The first issue of each year's volume is dedicated to international issues. According to the Washington & Lee University law review rankings, the journal has an impact factor of 9.02 as of 2020.[2]
References
External links
- Official website
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- Georgetown University Library
- Mortara Center
- Woodstock Theological Center
- Berkley Center
- Kennedy Institute of Ethics
- Prince Alwaleed Center
- Contemporary Arab Studies
- International and Regional Studies
- Institute for Consumer Research
- Center on Education and the Workforce
- Institute for the Study of International Migration
- International Law Institute
- Institute for Law, Science and Global Security
- Institute of Politics and Public Service
- Government Affairs Institute
- Latin American Studies Center
- Lombardi Cancer Center
- Alumni
- Presidents
- Board of directors
- Faculty
- Police
- Slave sale
- Andrew White
- John Gravenor
- Ferdinand Poulton
- John Carroll
- Patrick Francis Healy
- Edmund A. Walsh
- John J. DeGioia
- The Hoya
- The Georgetown Voice
- Georgetown Law Weekly
- Journal of International Affairs
- Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
- Georgetown Environmental Law Review
- The Georgetown Heckler
- WGTB
- University Press
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