91视频 | Haub Environmental Law Professor Katrina Fischer Kuh co-authored a chapter in a book released today from MIT Press, Democracy in a Hotter Time: Climate Change and Democratic Transformation, edited by David Orr.
Katrina Fischer Kuh
Biography
Katrina Fischer Kuh joined the Elisabeth Haub School of Law faculty as the Haub Distinguished Professor of Environmental Law in 2017. She was previously on the faculty at the Maurice A. Deane School of Law at Hofstra University, where she was a Professor of Law and served as an Associate Dean of Intellectual Life. Professor Kuh鈥檚 scholarship focuses on climate change and sustainability, and she has taught Environmental Law, International Environmental Law, Global Climate Change and U.S. Law, Administrative Law, and Torts. She is the co-editor of The Law of Adaptation to Climate Change: United States and International Aspects and Climate Change Law: An Introduction.
Before entering academia, Professor Kuh worked in the environmental and litigation practice groups in the New York office of Arnold & Porter LLP and served as an advisor on natural resource policy in the U.S. Senate. She received her undergraduate and law degrees from Yale and served as a law clerk to Judge Charles S. Haight of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York and Judge Diana Gribbon Motz of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.
Education
- BA, Yale College (summa cum laude)
- JD, Yale Law School
Selected Publications
View all of Professor Kuh鈥 publications on , or download her CV (PDF).
- Eco-Necrotourism and Public Land Management: Last Chance Tourism, Ecological Grief, and the World鈥檚 Disappearing Natural Wonders, 51 Fla. St. L. Rev. 133 (2024) (co-author with Robin Craig)
- 鈥淐an the Constitution Save the Planet?鈥 in Democracy in a Hotter Time (D. Orr ed.) (forthcoming 2023) (with James R. May)
- 鈥淧erformative Justice,鈥 in Adapting to a 4掳 World (K. Kuh & S. Roesler eds.) (forthcoming 2023)
- Informational Regulation, the Environment, and the Public, 105 Marq. L. Rev. 603 (2022)
- 鈥淭he International Climate Change Treaty Regime, Litigating Government (In)Action on Climate Change鈥; and 鈥淟egal and Policy Levers to Prompt Action by Private Climate Change Actors,鈥 in Introduction to Climate Change Law (2021)
- , 29 N.Y.U. Envtl. L.J. 171 (2021) (with Megan Edwards & Frederick A. McDonald)
- 鈥淧rofessional Responsibility and the Corporate Hoodwink: Using the Climate Disinformation Campaign to Examine the Ethical Responsibilities of Attorneys When Corporate Clients Mislead the Public to Avoid Government Regulation,鈥 in Environmental Law Disrupted (K. Hirokawa & J. Owley, eds.) (2021) (with Lissa Griffin)
- , 46 Ecology L.Q. 731 (2020)
- , 48 Envtl L 409 (2018) (with Jason J. Czarnezki & K. Ingemar Jonsson)
- 鈥淎gnostic Adaptation,鈥 in A Response to the IPCC Fifth Assessment, 45 ELR 10027 (2015) & Contemporary Issues in Climate Change Law & Policy: Essays Inspired by the IPCC (Robin Kundis Craig & Stephen R. Miller, eds. 2016).
- , 2015 Utah L. Rev. 1 (2015).
- , 65 Vand. L. Rev. 1565 (2012)
- , 61 Duke L.J. 1111 (2012)
- , 35 Harv. Envtl. L. Rev. 155 (2011)
Honors & Awards
- Ottinger Award 2019鈥2020
- Stegner Center Young Scholar 2013
- Undergraduate: Charles Garside Award, Howard Roberts Lamar Prize
Areas of Interest
Climate Change, Sustainability, Eco-labeling, Constitutional Environmental Rights
Related News and Stories
Professor Katrina Fisher Kuh and Professor James May examine how the Constitution falls short in protecting the environment in an article for Counter Punch.
鈥淒espite the obvious fact that life or liberty cannot exist without functioning ecosystems, courts in the United States do not recognize any federal constitutional environmental rights, even to the extent that an environmental right might be deemed appurtenant to explicitly enshrined constitutional rights,鈥 they write.
Professor Katrina Kuh speaks to Governors' Wind Energy Coalition about the Supreme Court appearing to be on the verge of erasing a tool for federal agencies to defend their environmental regulations against legal attack.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just so unfortunate that we are entering a moment where we are starting to have to respond to the real-world, on-the-ground impacts of climate change,鈥 said Katrina Fischer Kuh, an environmental law professor at 91视频. 鈥淚t would be great to have a network of expert scientists to help us in this moment, and it feels like we are in the exact opposite place.鈥