Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-qxdb6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T17:15:09.479Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Canons of environmental law: pollution of churches and the regulation of the medieval ‘environment’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Laurence Etherington*
Affiliation:
University of York
*
York Law School, University of York, Freboys Lane, Heslington East, York YO10 5GD, UK. Email: laurence.etherington@york.ac.uk

Abstract

The canon law rules addressing ‘Church Pollution’ provide a long-standing example of social regulation. A survey of historical material, and secondary sources, identifies a sophisticated set of precepts that developed over centuries. This development included application to one of the most important events in medieval England: the murder of Thomas Becket. Perhaps more importantly, the regime was widely used and thus of great significance to the ordinary citizens of the Middle Ages. Though largely historical, more recent examples of employment can also be found. When viewed through a contemporary lens, there are some connections that can be made with modern concepts of ‘pollution’ and contemporary environmental law and policy, such as that relating to contaminated land. While the relationships should not be overplayed, that analysis suggests a social and cultural heritage that has been drawn upon, whether consciously or not. When attempting to view matters from the perspective of medieval society, so conceptualising the ‘environment’ to include consideration and protection of the spiritual environment, further associations can be found. The differences in focus for the regulatory endeavours reflect differing fears, values and priorities. They also identify how these factors influence our definition and regulation of ‘pollution’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society of Legal Scholars 2016

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

I am grateful to Simon Halliday, Jenny Steele, Adam Tucker, Sarah Wilson and Abbie North, as well as the anonymous reviewers, for their comments on earlier drafts of this paper. I am also grateful for the help of Emma Simmons at York Law School, and staff from the Borthwick Institute for Archives at the University of York, for assistance in accessing and translating the (limited) primary sources utilised for this paper.

References

1. Scully, RThe unmaking of a saint: Thomas Becket and the English Reformation’ (2000)Google Scholar 86 Cath Hist Rev 579 at 582. Most scholars agree that the knights initially intended no more than arrest, the murder resulting, in part, from Becket's refusal to go quietly: Vincent, NThe murderers of Thomas Becket’ in Fyde, N and Reitz, D (eds) Bischofsmord im Mittelalter (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2003) p 211.Google Scholar

2. The full horror of the sacrilege included profaning the church, in the (sacred) Christmas season, with the blood and murder of a priest, cutting off the crown of his head (which had been dedicated to God), and scraping the brain out to scatter with blood and bones all over the panel floor: A Duggan Thomas Becket (Reputations) (London: Edward Arnold, 2004) p 227.

3. To store them as holy relics: Hayes, DBody as champion of Church authority and sacred place: the murder of Thomas Becket’ in Meyerson, M, Thiery, D and Falk, O (eds) A Great Effusion of Blood: Interpreting Medieval Violence (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2004) p 198.Google Scholar

4. N ‘The reconciliation sentence and service in St. Paul's Cathedral’, Consistory Court of London, February 7, 1891. Reported in Chancellor Tristram The Principal Judgments Delivered in the Consistory Courts of London, Hereford Ripon and Wakefield, and in the Commissary of Canterbury 1872 to 1890 (London: Butterworths, 1893) p 164.

5. R. (on the application of Redland Minerals Ltd) v Secretary of State for the Environment, Food & Rural Affairs [2010] EWHC 913 (Admin).

6. See eg Sandberg, R Law and Religion (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; A Musson and C Stebbings Making Legal History: Approaches and Methodologies (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012); and A Gillespie ‘Religious justifications for environmental protection’ in A Gillespie (ed) International Environmental Law, Policy, and Ethics (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000).

7. There is also no single event in the history of the Middle Ages with the details so well known as Becket's murder: Vincent, above n 1, p 211.

8. Including excommunication for some, and public penance for King Henry II.

9. A Hayes, above n 3, p 198. ‘The great church, one of the ancient shrines of Christendom, stood violated and defiled … It was to be almost a year before Canterbury Cathedral was declared cleansed from the sacrilege’: W Urry Thomas Becket: His Last Days (Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 1999) p 155.

10. Duggan, above n 2, p 215.

11. Murray notes that suicide ‘polluted’ speech, thought, the body and place, which meant that a sacred space, such as a chapel, might need to be re-consecrated (A Murray Suicide in the Middle Ages, vol 2, The Curse on Self-Murder (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998) p 449); the question arising in the case of an attempted suicide in 1297, for example (ibid, p 403).

12. As the focus of this paper is the historical regulation of Church Pollution, references will use the past tense. This is not to suggest that it has no contemporary use or relevance. An example of a recent (related) event, in the Anglican Church, is the re-dedication of a churchyard in Didcot in March 2014, following the discovery of a murder victim there.

13. Helmholz, R The Oxford History of the Laws of England, vol I, The Canon Law and Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction from 597 to the 1640s (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004) p 494 Google Scholar in broad terms (including theft of church property).

14. Ibid, p 495.

15. And continues to be, of course.

16. The term ‘spiritual’ is generally used in this paper in the context of the intangible aspects of religious belief, specifically those relating to the Church in medieval England. That is in no way to seek to equate spirituality with organised religion.

17. Helmholz, above n 13, p 497.

18. Blood is, of course, associated with ‘impurity’ in many religions.

19. Thiery, D Polluting the Sacred: Violence, Faith, and the ‘Civilizing’ of Parishioners in Late Medieval England (Leiden: Brill, 2009) p 48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

20. Translation of Gratian's Decretum C. 3. D. LXVIII (repeated in Decreti Tertia Pars De Consecrati Dist. I C.XX), very kindly provided by Gary Brannan of the Borthwick Institute for Archives, University of York: ‘things’ meaning ‘places’ in this context.

21. Perhaps a result of the more ‘multifunctional’ use of church property in the Middle Ages.

22. Helmholz, RCrime, compurgation and the courts of the medieval Church’ (1983)Google Scholar 1 Law & Hist Rev 1 at 7.

23. Involving either violence, or burial of excommunicates: Clarke, P The Interdict in the Thirteenth Century: A Question of Collective Guilt (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007) p 222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

24. ‘The old chapels at St John's’ in Harrison Records of the Tynwald & St Johns Chapel in the Isle of Man, Manx Soc, vol XIX; available at http://isle-of-man.com/manxnotebook/manxsoc/msvol19/pt02.htm (accessed 27 March 2015).

25. A suicide case at Calvary Church, Manhattan in 1897, reported in the New York Times 21 June 1897; see http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=F10612FF3F5811738DDDA80A94DE405B8785F0D3 (accessed 27 March 2015).

26. The Canterbury & York Society Series (editions of episcopal and archiepiscopal registers). I am grateful for the assistance of Jack Wells and Anthony Lynch in undertaking this survey.

27. As well as cases from the fourteenth century.

28. At Carlisle Cathedral, Thompson, WN (ed) Register of John de Halton, Bishop of Carlisle, 1292–1324 (London: The Canterbury & York Society Series, vol 12, 1913) p 76.Google Scholar

29. Bannister, AT (ed) Registrum Ricardi Mayew, episcopi Herefordensis, 1504–16 (London:The Canterbury & York Society Series, vol 27, 1921) p 105.Google Scholar

30. At Exeter Cathedral in 1425, Dunstan, GR (ed) The Register of Edmund Lacy, Bishop of Exeter, 1420–55, ‘Registrum commune’, vol 1 (London: The Canterbury & York Society Series, vol 60, 1963) p 157, for example.Google Scholar

31. At Broadwood Kelly Church in 1425, ibid, p 111, for example.

32. At Chulmelegh Parish Church in 1426, ibid, p 161, for example.

33. At Stamford Courtenay Churchyard in 1421, ibid, p 29, for example.

34. Harrison, above n 24.

35. Tristram, above n 4, p 170. Though several instances of suicide in churches were noted, the 'St Paul's case' was considered to have been the first recorded instance since the Reformation of such an act ‘during Divine Service and in the face of the congregation’.

36. S Lewis ‘Dubbieside – Dun’, in A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland (London, 1846) pp 297–310; available at http://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-dict/scotland/pp297-310 (accessed 27 March 2015).

37. Case 1400/01 Pollution of Church. LXIV ds. Joh. Del Grene, V. of Wystowe, in J Purvis A Mediaeval Act Book: With Some Account of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction at York (York: Herald Printing Works, 1943) p 51.

38. SirPhillimore, R, SirPhillimore, W and Jemmett, C The Ecclesiastical Law of the Church of England, vol I (London: Sweet & Maxwell, 2nd edn, 1895) p 1773.Google Scholar

39. Tristram, above n 4, p 171.

40. Neale, D and Webb, B The Symbolism of Churches and Church Ornaments: A Translation of he First Book of the Rationale divinorum officiorum by William Durandus (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1893) pp 108109.Google Scholar

41. Thiery, above n 19, p 74. There are also further connections between bodily fluids and pollution, discussed below.

42. Decretal of Boniface VIII added to the Liber Sextus (Sext.3.21.1): see Helmholz, above n 13, p 150.

43. Thiery, above n 19, p 58.

44. Tristram, above n 3, p 165. The disruption of order no doubt being a significant factor.

45. Hayes, above n 3, p 190. The offence was further aggravated as it included the removal of the crown of Becket's head (dedicated to God), during the Christmas season: Duggan, above n 2, p 216.

46. The Canon in Gratian's Decretum required re-consecration (see above), but by the late twelfth century, Alexander III's decretal ‘Significasti’ (1172–1173) ordered reconciliation: Clarke, above n 22, p 246. Durandus’ thirteenth-century Rationale states that intentional shedding of blood warrants only reconciliation: Neale and Webb, above n 40, pp 107–108. An eighteenth-century source suggests that pollution may justify a full re-consecration, ‘Pollution by Effusion of Blood’ being the only situation where a church once consecrated could be consecrated again: R Grey and E Gibson A System of English Ecclesiastical Law: Extracted from the Codex juris ecclesiastici anglicani of the Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of London for Use of Young Students in the Universities, Who Are Designed for Holy Orders (London, 1732) p 67.

47. Helmholz, above n 13, p 497.

48. X.3.40.4: ibid, p 150.

49. Tristram, above n 3, p 166.

50. Thiery, above n 19, p 51.

51. D Thiery ‘Welcome to the parish, remove your cap and stop assaulting your neighbour’ in D Biggs, S Michalove and A Reeves (eds) Reputation & Representation in Fifteenth Century Europe (Leiden: Brill, 2004) p 241.

52. D Elliott ‘Sex in holy places: an exploration of a medieval anxiety’ (1994) 6 J Women's Hist 6 at 9.

53. Elliott, D Fallen Bodies: Pollution, Sexuality, and Demonology in the Middle Ages (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press 1999) p 21.Google Scholar

54. Thiery, above n 19, p 48.

55. Ibid, p 48.

56. Johnson, C (ed) Registrum Hamonis Hethe: Diocesis Roffensis, A.D. 1319–1352 (London: The Canterbury & York Society Series, vols 48–49, 1948) p 242.Google Scholar

57. Thiery, above n 19, p 49.

58. Brundage, J Medieval Canon Law (London: Longman, 1995) p 42.Google Scholar

59. See CP.G.104 Cause Papers, Borthwick Institute for Archives at the University of York.

60. Helmholz, R Roman Canon Law in Reformation England (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990) p 2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

61. Case in Chuddelegh on 23 November 1426: Dunstan, above n 30, p 191.

62. See Helmholz, above n 22, p 1.

63. See CP.G.104 Cause Papers, Borthwick Institute for Archives at the University of York.

64. Thomas Shaw in CP.G.104 Cause Papers, Borthwick Institute for Archives at the University of York.

65. Even though ex officio fees were relatively low, guilty parties were called upon to pay these: Woodcock, B Medieval Ecclesiastical Courts in the Diocese of Canterbury (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1952) p 70.Google Scholar

66. Helmholz, above n 13, p 150. This was around £1600 in modern terms, or one third of the annual wage of a craftsman in the building industry.

67. Case 1400/01 Pollution of Church. LXIV ds. Joh. Del Grene, V. of Wystowe: in Purvis, above n 39, p 51.

68. Johnson, above n 56, p 795 (emphasis added).

69. Brundage, above n 58, p 152.

70. Outhwaite, RB The Rise and Fall of the English Ecclesiastical Courts 1500–1860 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006) p 11.Google Scholar

71. W Urry ‘The Normans in Canterbury’ [1958] 8 Ann Normandie 119 at 138.

72. Thiery, above n 19, p 36.

73. The sentence of excommunication having pre-Christian roots, including the use by Druids: R Hill ‘The theory and practice of excommunication in medieval England’ [1957] 42 History 1 at 2.

74. The basic distinction from the thirteenth century onwards being between ‘minor’ and ‘major’ form: Logan, FD Excommunication and the Secular Arm in Medieval England (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 1968) p 14.Google Scholar

75. Ollivant, S The Court of the Official in Pre-Reformation Scotland (Edinburgh: Stair Society, 1982) p 151.Google Scholar These impacts are considered further below.

76. Creating a special immunity from violence, and separating from the secular world: R Helmholz The Spirit of Classical Canon Law (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 2010) p 385.

77. Helmholz, above n 13, p 619.

78. Dunstan, GR (ed) The register of Edmund Lacy, Bishop of Exeter, 1420–1455: ‘Registrum commune’, vol 2 (London: The Canterbury & York Society Series, vol 61, 1966) p 361.Google Scholar

79. William Baker case: Bannister, above n 29, p 105.

80. Johnson, above n 56, p 242.

81. Vodola, E Excommunication in the Middle Ages (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1986) p 36.Google Scholar

82. Johnson, above n 56, p 249.

83. Ibid, p 441.

84. Helmholz, above n 60, ch 6.

85. Ibid, p 113.

86. Helmholz, above n 22, p 2. The worst crimes could merit ‘relaxation’ to the secular arm; whereby the civil authorities could inflict various forms of physical punishment: Brundage, above n 58, p 153.

87. Coyle, S and Morrow, K The Philosophical Foundations of Environmental Law (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2004)Google Scholar note the earlier focus on the intrinsic moral dimension of property rights, rather than the modern dominance of instrumentalist thinking.

88. Murray, above n 11, p 428.

89. Ibid, p 426.

90. Douglas, M Purity and Danger (London: Routledge Classics, 2002) p 3.Google Scholar ‘Pollution fears’ may represent a range of deep concerns, and differing priorities in values. For individuals, this might be seen in an elevation of the terror of eternal damnation over temporal health, while for powerful groups, loss of authority may be the greatest fear.

91. Ibid, p 1.

92. Ibid, p 62.

93. Akbari, S Idols in the East: European Representations of Islam and the Orient, 1100–1450 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009) p 236.Google Scholar

94. K Hanson ‘Blood and purity in Leviticus and Revelation’ (1993) 28 Listening: J Relig & Culture 215 at 215.

95. Douglas, above n 90.

96. Hanson, above n 94, p 216.

97. Murray, above n 11, pp 426–427. Murray suggests that, in the context of suicide at least, intention (and hence the morality of acts) was less important in medieval perceptions (p 450), the preoccupation being with the material aftermath.

98. Ibid, p 450.

99. SOr ‘pollution’ through forbidden acts or events clearly lacking moral culpability, such as menstruating women entering sacred spaces.

100. That remained virtually unchanged until 1965: Thiery, above n 19, p 42.

101. Elliott, above n 53, p 21.

102. Clarke, above n 23, p 246.

103. Hair, P Before the Bawdy Court (London: Paul Elek, 1972) p 20.Google Scholar

104. Thiery, above n 19, p 131.

105. Ibid, p 131.

106. JrRodgers, W, ‘The seven statutory wonders of US environmental law: origins and morphology’, in Percival, R and Alevizatos, D (eds) Law and the Environment: A Multidisciplinary Reader (Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 1997).Google Scholar

107. Alder, J and Wilkinson, D Environmental Law and Ethics (London: Macmillan, 1999) p 9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

108. Ibid, p 180.

109. Ibid, p 9.

110. A Flournoy ‘In search of an environmental ethic’ [2003] 28 Colum J Envtl L 63 at 114.

111. Ibid, p 70.

112. Viscount Dilhorne in Alphacell v Woodward (HL) [1972] AC 824.

113. Ashworth, AConceptions of overcriminalisation’ (2008) Ohio St J Crim L 407 at 420.Google Scholar

114. Heinzerling, LThe environment’ in Tushnet, M and Cane, P (eds) The Oxford Handbook of Legal Studies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003) p 703.Google Scholar

115. Examples include protection of designated geographical habitats under European and International Environmental Law: see eg the Habitats Directive (92/43/EEC) and the Ramsar Convention.

116. See eg Defra Guidance on Ecosystem Services; available at https://www.gov.uk/ecosystems-services (accessed 27 March 2015).

117. See eg Youngs, D The Life Cycle in Western Europe, c.1300–c.1500 (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2006).Google Scholar

118. de Sadeleer, N Environmental Principles – From Political Slogans to Legal Rules (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002).Google Scholar

119. Augustine, C A Commentary on the New Code of Canon Law, vol 6, Administrative Law (St Louis, MO: B. Herder, 1918) p 42 Google Scholar.

120. See House of Commons Environment Committee: First Report on Contaminated Land, Session 1989–90, HC Paper 170–I.

121. Generally referred to as ‘Pt 2A’ more recently.

122. See eg Etherington, L ‘“Mandatory Guidance” for dealing with contaminated land: paradox or pragmatism?’ [2002] 23 Stat L Rev 203.Google Scholar

123. Section 78B.

124. Under s 78A(4), ‘“Harm” means harm to the health of living organisms or other interference with the ecological systems of which they form part and, in the case of man, includes harm to his property.’

125. Fisher, E, Lange, B and Scotford, E Environmental Law: Text, Cases & Materials (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013) p 989.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

126. See para 3.8 of Department for Environment Food & Rural Affairs Environmental Protection Act 1990: Part 2A Contaminated Land Statutory Guidance (April 2012); available at https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/223705/pb13735cont-land-guidance.pdf (accessed 30 December 2015) (‘Statutory Guidance’).

127. See s 78A(7) of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 and s 6 of the Statutory Guidance.

128. See reg 7 of the Contaminated Land (England) Regulations 2006 (SI 2006/1380).

129. Paragraph 6.7(c) of the Statutory Guidance.

130. The assumption being that other regulatory controls will play this role.

131. Section 78 F(2).

132. Section 78 F(4) & (5).

133. See CA Cross (ed) Encyclopedia of Environmental Health: Law and Practice (London: Sweet & Maxwell, 1968) at D602/38 and 39.

134. See para 8.5 of the Statutory Guidance.

135. See de Sadeleer, above n 118.

136. Section 78E.

137. Section 79 N.

138. Section 78P.

139. Section 78H.

140. Section 78E(4).

141. Section 78 M.

142. Above n 82.

143. Section 78 M(5).

144. Section 78R.

145. See above n 86.

146. This includes providing incentives through the Town and Country Planning system, where appropriate.

147. Section 78 L and the Contaminated Land (England) Regulations 2006 (SI 2006/1380).

148. Parry, JH (ed) Registrum Johannes de Trillek, episcopi Herefordensis, 1344–1361 (London: The Canterbury & York Society Series, vol 8, 1912) p 124.Google Scholar

149. See eg Pointing, J and Malcolm, RStatutory nuisance: the sanitary paradigm and judicial conservatism’ (2006)Google Scholar 18 J Envtl L 37 (‘Sanitary Paradigm’); and Malcolm, R and Pointing, J Statutory Nuisance: Law and Practice (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2nd edn, 2011 Google Scholar).

150. Bell, S, McGillivray, D and Pedersen, O Environmental Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 8th edn, 2013) p 7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar In the medieval world, physical and spiritual/religious concerns would not have been distinguished.

151. Coyle and Morrow, above n 87, p 203.

152. Alder and Wilkinson, above n 107, p 8.

153. See eg Pointing and Malcolm ‘Sanitary Paradigm’, above n 149; and B Pontin ‘Environmental law-making public opinion in Victorian Britain: the cross-currents of Bentham's and Coleridge's ideas’ (2014) 34 Oxford J Legal Stud 759. Even the ‘longer view’ taken by Coyle and Morrow, above n 87, deliberates ‘on the evolution of thinking’ over ‘the last 400 years or so’ (preface).

154. See Ibbetson, D A Historical Introduction to the Law of Obligations (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999)Google Scholar; and J Loengard ‘The assize of nuisance: origins of an action at common law’ (1978) Camb L J 144, for example.

155. See E Fisher et al ‘Maturity and methodology: starting a debate about environmental law scholarship’ (2009) 21 J Envtl L 213.

156. See ‘The moral foundations of Church Pollution’ section, above.

157. Murray, above n 11, p 427.

158. See eg J Baker ‘Why the history of English law has not been finished’ [2000] Camb L J 62.

159. TT Arvind ‘Historical approaches’ in S Halliday et al An Introduction to the Study of Law (Edinburgh: W Green/Thomson Reuters, 2012). See also S Wilson The Origins of Modern Financial Crime (London: Routledge, 2013), for example.

160. Milsom, S Historical Foundations of the Common Law (London: Butterworths, 1969) p 13.Google Scholar

161. The Reformation comprising one of the events commonly considered to mark the end of the period.

162. Brundage, above n 58, p ix.

163. Helmholz, above n 13, p 495.

164. Thiery, above n 19, p 39.

165. Brundage, above n 58, p vii.

166. In a unitary Christian society, this amounted, at least in theory, to near-complete ostracism: Logan, above n 74, p 13.

167. Marchant, R The Church Under the Law: Justice, Administration and Discipline in the Diocese of York, 1560–1640 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1969) p 221.Google Scholar

168. Ritchie, C The Ecclesiastical Courts of York (Arbroath: Herald Press, 1956) p 76.Google Scholar

169. Thiery, above n 19, p 36.

170. Bracton, quoted in Sir W Holdsworth A History of English Law, vol I (London: Methuen, 1936–1972) p 631.

171. Hill, above n 73, p 1.

172. Thiery, above n 19.

173. It was not uncommon for large sums to be left in wills to pay for masses to this effect: Youngs, above n 117, p 206.

174. There may, of course, be a range of other factors and motivations for regulating the church as a ‘special’ space in this way, such as reinforcing the role of the church in society.

175. Thiery, above n 19, p 108.

176. Helmholz, above n 13, p 495.

177. Thiery, above n 19, p 129.

178. Ibid, p 130, for example.

179. H Thomas ‘Shame, masculinity and the death of Thomas Becket’ (2012) 87 Speculum 1050 at 1055.

180. Thiery, above n 19, p 56.

181. The Consistory Court having very close contact with the laity with jurisdiction over areas such as wills and probate, testamentary matters and defamation: A Willis Winchester Consistory Court Depositions 1561–1602 (Hambledon: AJ Willis, 1960) p 1; and Marchant, above n 167, p 64.

182. Holdsworth, above n 170, p 588.

183. Canon law giving way to the king's ecclesiastical law of the Church of England: Holdsworth, above n 170, p 598.

184. Tomalin, E Biodiversity and Biodivinity (Farnham: Ashgate, 2009) p 14.Google Scholar

185. Marchant, above n 167, p 221.

186. Ibid, p 227.

187. Hill, above n 73, p 11.

188. Coyle and Morrow, above n 87, p 12.

189. Outhwaite, above n 70, p 84; discipline of the laity being legally terminated through a series of Acts.

190. See Bell et al, above n 150, pp 44–56.

191. O Pedersen ‘Modest pragmatic lessons for a diverse and incoherent environmental law’ [2013] 33 Oxford J Legal Stud 33 103 at 106.

192. Ibid, at 110.

193. Ibid, at 125.

194. Holder, J and McGillivray, D (eds) Locality and Identity: Environmental Issues in Law and Society (Aldershot: Ashgate, 1999) p 10.Google Scholar

195. Karkkainen, BNEPA and the curious evolution of environmental impact assessment in the United States’ in Holder, J and McGillivray, D (eds) Taking Stock of Environmental Assessment: Law, Policy and Practice (Abingdon: Routledge Cavendish, 2007) p 49.Google Scholar

196. Also known as ‘CERCLA’ or ‘Superfund’.

197. See eg Tromans, S and Turrall-Clarke, R Contaminated Land: The New Regime (London: Sweet and Maxwell, 2nd edn, 2007) p 7.Google Scholar

198. Bell et al, above n 150, p 50.

199. Nadeu, R Rebirth of the Sacred (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012) p 8.Google Scholar