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Ways of Seeing in Environmental Law: How Deforestation Became an Object of Climate Governance *
William Boyd
Few areas of law are as deeply implicated with science and technology as environmental law, yet we have only a cursory understanding of how science and technology shape the field. Environmental law, it seems, has lost sight of the constitutive role that science and technology play in fashioning the problems that it targets for regulation. Too often, the study and practice of environmental law and governance take the object of governance—be it climate change, water pollution, biodiversity, or deforestation—as self-evident, natural, and fully-formed without recognizing the significant scientific and technological investments that go into making such objects and the manner in which such investments shape the possibilities for response. This Article seeks to broaden environmental law’s field of vision, replacing the tendency to naturalize environmental problems with an exploration of how particular scientific and technological knowledge practices make environmental problems into coherent objects of governance. Such knowledge practices, or ways of seeing, are instrumental in shaping regulatory possibilities and must be interrogated directly as key constituents of particular forms of governance. The Copyright © 2010 by the Regents of the University of California. * Associate Professor of Law, University of Colorado Law School. J.D. Stanford Law School; Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley, Energy & Resources Group. Special thanks to the editors at Ecology Law Quarterly. Many thanks also to Eric Biber, Meg Caldwell, Alex Camacho, Nestor Davidson, Pierre de Vries, David Driesen, Vic Fleischer, Mike Gerrard, Lakshman Guruswamy, Clare Huntington, Sarah Krakoff, Doug Kysar, John Mikhail, Dick Norgaard, Paul Ohm, Jed Purdy, Jim Salzman, Pierre Schlag, Mark Squillace, David Takacs, Buzz Thompson, Mike Vandenbergh, Michael Wara, Phil Weiser, and Charles Wilkinson for helpful comments. Katie Patterson and Nick Grower provided excellent research assistance. Previous versions of this Article were presented at the Vanderbilt University School of Law; the Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei International Workshop on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation, Milan; the Institut du Développement Durable et des Relations Internationales Workshop on International Support for Climate Mitigation in the Forest Sector, Paris; the University of Colorado Law School, New Thinking on Climate Change Law & Policy Works-in-Progress Symposium; and the Stanford Law School Environment & Energy Workshop.
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