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106 Following
22 Posts
Criminal Law @ GW Law School
Dir Science & Policy @ Justice Innovation Lab
Friend & Board @ DC Justice Lab
Climate Justice Advcoate
LinkedInhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/donaldbraman/
Google Scholarhttps://scholar.google.com/citations?user=kyF4Gt0AAAAJ&hl=en
SSRNhttps://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=286206
GitHubhttps://donaldbraman.github.io

I’ve recently learned of a different way of limiting corporate travel, and I think it’s brilliant.

Every company travel policy I’d heard of until yesterday has been a variation on the same theme:

There’s an annual a travel budget. Management may or may not have priority and there may be limitations on who can travel together, but in the end the true limit is the amount of money in the budget.

The policy I learned of yesterday is almost, but not quite, unlike the others. The budget isn’t about money. It’s about CO2 emissions. Each department gets a specific amount of CO2 emissions for travel for the year.

The implications are interesting:

Travel within Europe has become train first as a natural consequence. Intercontinental travel has been reduced by a significant amount.

It’s an absolutely amazing policy and it should be the standard corporate travel policy everywhere.

Great summary of the state of the climate crisis as a departure piece: https://archive.ph/zRS6w. You will be missed on the climate beat! But very glad that the coverage is on safe hands with Myles and Amanda.
Does anyone else find it maddening that the state that Congressman Andy Harris actually represents has now legalized recreational marijuana, while he continues to block the DC voters decision to legalize it here (8.5 years ago)? #dcstatehood

@donaldbraman : "Ein Wesensmerkmal des Verbrechens ist in der Tat, dass ein illegaler Akt begangen wird. Ein anderes wichtiges Merkmal ist aber, ob es Unrechtsbewusstsein gab. Dieses Kriterium ist erfüllt: Die fossile Industrie tat etwas, von dem sie genau wusste, dass es katastrophal ist. Und sie täuschte darüber hinweg. Das zusammen macht das Verbrechen aus."
@zeitonline

https://www.zeit.de/2023/17/oelkonzerne-klage-fahrlaessige-toetung-klimawandel

Klage gegen Ölkonzerne: "Sie taten alles, um nicht gestoppt zu werden"

Der US-Jurist Donald Braman will Ölkonzerne wegen fahrlässiger Tötung vor Gericht stellen, weil ihre fossilen Brennstoffe den Klimawandel antreiben. Ist das realistisch?

ZEIT ONLINE
I read the The Gaurdian daily, so I'm especially happy that Brian Kahn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/blkahn) is covering our Climate Homicide manuscript (ssrn:. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4335779 ) We're still editing and have been getting wonderful advice and feedback. Please let us know if you think we have missed or mistaken anything!
Mastodon now has over 10 million users! That is twice as many people as the population of Japan if only 5 million people lived in Japan. Incredible.
10,009,353 accounts
+1,559 in the last hour
+44,606 in the last day
+158,827 in the last week
Great reporting by @AriannaSkibell at @politico on the way climate-change-related disasters are "displacing millions of people in the U.S.": https://www.politico.com/newsletters/power-switch/2023/02/06/climate-disasters-displacing-millions-in-the-u-s-00081297.
Climate disasters displacing millions in the U.S.

POLITICO
Great post by Jeffrey Bellin over at Law360: "It is mass incarceration that is the radical, expensive and unproven government policy." https://www.law360.com/articles/1571722/we-can-ensure-public-safety-and-still-reduce-incarceration. Couldn't agree more!
We Can Ensure Public Safety And Still Reduce Incarceration - Law360

Recent progress toward reducing jail and prison populations remains fragile as tough-on-crime policies reemerge, but American history shows that we don’t have to choose between less violence and lower incarceration rates — we can have both, says Jeffrey Bellin at William & Mary Law School.