College of Law鈥檚 Driesen Using Fulbright in Canada to Study Carbon Pricing and Climate Policies
![[text] 2022-23 Fulbright Research Chair in the Environment and Canada, David Driesen, University Professor, College of Law; with Driesen portrait](/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/22-DMC-448900_SUnews_Fulbright-Driesen-600x310-1.jpg)
Over the past five years, the state of American democracy and politics drove University Professor focus more toward the constitutional law side of his expertise. Now, his receipt of a 2023 Fulbright Research Chair in the Environment and Canada means that the College of Law professor can spend a semester in Canada studying carbon pricing (such as emissions trading and carbon taxes), dedicating time back to research in his other areas of specialty鈥攅nvironmental law and the economics of law.
Driesen received word of his Fulbright award earlier this summer. He heads to Canada in September to spend the fall semester at the . With faculty there and at its , he鈥檒l consult with program developers, policy analysts and environmental researchers to gauge the effectiveness of carbon pricing in reducing environmental impact in Canada and elsewhere.
He will also have the opportunity to work with , deputy director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research. Mehling is an expert on comparative and international climate policy design and implementation who has worked on climate issues worldwide and has advised agency and government decision-makers in over a dozen countries.
Carbon pricing programs aim to reduce carbon emissions, mainly from fossil fuel production and use by making emitting greenhouse gases more expensive. They are implemented to attempt to reduce global warming, which is currently causing an environmental and public health crisis in many countries.
Driesen plans to continue reviewing existing carbon pricing initiatives, reports and program structures and to speak with program and policy analysts involved in implementing Canada鈥檚 carbon pricing programs. He wants to develop a conceptual framework unifying and critiquing claims in the literature that carbon pricing has proven rather ineffective.
In the United States, Driesen says, only the Northeastern states and California have any type of emissions trading or carbon pricing system in place. By contrast, Canada requires all provinces to adopt some sort of climate pricing program. For that reason, he anticipates that Canada will provide 鈥渁 good laboratory for looking at how well those programs are working.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 important to examine critically our assumptions about climate policy now that we鈥檝e had decades of experience with it,鈥 Driesen says. 鈥淭his Fulbright provides the opportunity to gain a different perspective by interacting with different scholars and different countries than I might otherwise. I鈥檓 very excited about this and very grateful to 网爆门 for supporting it.鈥
鈥淧rofessor Driesen is a leading scholar in environmental law and this support will further his thoughtful research in carbon pricing and climate change. Fulbright Scholarships are highly competitive and receiving one reflects the value and urgency of an applicant鈥檚 research,鈥 says College of Law Dean Craig Boise. 鈥淚 look forward to David鈥檚 continued scholarship in this area and the impact it will have on our students.鈥

Driesen expects his undertaking to affect a prior academic experience that he鈥檇 like to resume鈥攖eaching an interdisciplinary climate course in the College of Law, with faculty members from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, as well as with environmental scientists at the University. 鈥淚 haven鈥檛 done that in the last few years and I鈥檓 hoping to get back to it. This experience will certainly influence how I teach that course,鈥 he says.
Driesen has extensive experience in environmental law. He is a member scholar with the Center for Progressive Reform. He blogs on climate disruption issues for that organization and for RegBlog. He has worked as a consultant for the organization American Rivers and other environmental groups on Clean Water Act issues and has testified before Congress on implementation of the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments.
He has written numerous amicus briefs in Supreme Court cases and has听represented former Sen. Hillary Clinton and other legislators in Clean Air Act litigation in the D.C. Circuit. He also engages in public service defending democracy, environmental law鈥檚 constitutionality and efforts to combat the climate crisis. Earlier in his career, he was a senior project attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council in its Air and Energy Program. Driesen also clerked for Justice Robert Utter of the Washington State Supreme Court and worked in the Special Litigation Division of the Washington State Attorney General鈥檚 Office.
His books on environmental issues include听the 鈥溾 and the textbooks听鈥” and “.鈥 He has also published two edited volumes,听鈥溾澨齛nd听鈥溾澨齛nd he has published numerous articles with leading journals.
Driesen joined 网爆门 in 1995. He holds a J.D. from Yale Law School, a M.Mus. from the Yale School of Music and a B. Mus. degree from the Oberlin Conservatory.
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