Here you will find a general overview of several important pieces of environmental legislation.
Neil talks with Jon about his love for science and technology, the difference between having scientists and politicians as guests on The Daily Show, the importance of scientific literacy, the intersection of science and public policy, and the cosmic connections that unite us all… because even New Jersey is made of star stuff.
Actress, comedian, and political activist Janeane Garofalo joins the show to lay out the political theater as she sees it, and cedes no ground on whether scientific issues should ever be a topic of partisan debate.
Dr. Harry Harlow’s rhesus monkey experiments in the 1950s contributed a great deal to psychologists’ understanding of attachment theory.
Play this game to find out how a law protects animals and plants.
Invent a story about an endangered species. Then draw and write about it!
In the Supplemental Humanities Bundle, students will explore how states are addressing the vaping crisis through legislation around the sale, purchase, and use of e-cigarettes.
Cooper Center Outreach Team organized a panel discussion about sustainability in the apparel industry, inspired in part by the documentary The True Cost.
A federal court recently ordered farmers to stop spraying one of the country’s most widely used herbicides, dicamba.
The Trump administration is seeking to lift federal protections on the Tongass National Forest in Alaska, paving the way for possible timber harvests and road construction in the largest national forest in the U.S.
The Acid Rain Program (ARP), established under Title IV of the 1990 Clean Air Act (CAA) Amendments requires major emission reductions of sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx), the primary precursors of acid rain, from the power sector.
The Plain English Guide to the Clean Air Act provides a brief introduction to the 1990 Clean Air Act.