Nicholas F. Stump is a lifelong West Virginian. His scholarship explores environmental law, critical legal theory, law and social movements, and Appalachian and rural studies. He currently works as a faculty member with the George R. Farmer Jr. Law Library at West Virginia University College of Law.
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Acknowledgments Introduction 1.?Historical Beginnings: Appalachian Coal and the Coming of Industrial Capitalism 2.?Foundations of Environmental Law: Classical Liberalism 3.?Twentieth-Century Appalachia: Failed Development Models and Coal's Hegemony 4.?Environmental Law: A Critically Flawed Paradigm 5.?Modern Appalachia: Environmental Law's Failure and the Broader Regional Landscape 6.?Systemic Economic and Socio-Legal Change: Theory, Practice, and Praxis 7.?Remaking Appalachia: Strongly Ecologically Sustainable Futures Notes Bibliography Index
"A must-read for anyone concerned about our reliance on unsustainable energy sources and environmentally damaging practices, and what can be done about it."Law Library Journal "Remaking Appalachia offers a thorough critical account of Appalachia through a law and political economy lens, and makes a persuasive case for what the region needs today: a hopeful vision for a new future rooted in transformative, bottom-up change." Ann M. Eisenberg, University of South Carolina

