Louisiana Law Lets Wildlife Agents Trespass on Private Property
A lawsuit from the Institute for Justice claims the law violates the Louisiana Constitution.
A lawsuit from the Institute for Justice claims the law violates the Louisiana Constitution.
Claims of the Act's success at recovering imperiled species are vastly overstated, especially on private land.
Eight weeks ago, a camouflaged game warden came onto Josh Highlander's land, scared his son, and stole his trail camera.
The lawsuit looks iffy in light of the Supreme Court's "open fields" doctrine.
Proponents say that the bills would ensure the quality of fishing and hunting guides, but occupational licensing doesn't tend to work that way.
A selection of Reason's most incisive articles on population, pollution, resource depletion, biodiversity, energy, climate change, and the ideological environmentalists' penchant for peddling doom.
A legal fight over the Arctic grayling shows how regs can hurt rather than help.
Mondays are good days for bear stories, even if we have not posted any in a while.
“I think the Chestnut is an example of an interventionist approach,” says scientist Jared Westbrook. “We might have some capabilities and responsibilities to correct some of the problems that we created.”
How a Prohibition-era legal precedent allows warrantless surveillance on private property.
Total human neurons outweigh all farmed animals by a factor of 30–1.
The Norwegian government euthanized Freya the walrus on Sunday, citing safety concerns for the crowds that gathered to watch her sunbathe.
Despite the objections of animal protection organizations, careful commercial fishing may be the best bet for the Amazon and the world's aquariums.
An examination of how reconceiving animal rights might aid wildlife conservation