Robert W. Adler is the Jefferson B. and Rita E. Fordham Presidential Dean at the University of Utah, S.J. Quinney College of Law, where he is affiliated with the Wallace Stegner Center for Land, Resources, and the Environment.
For almost 35 years, Dean Adler has been involved in a wide range of complex environmental issues as a litigator, lobbyist, regulatory attorney, enforcement attorney, and in other related capacities. He has litigated or co-litigated cases involving the Three Mile Island accident, the Exxon Valdez oil spill, proposed oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and several major lawsuits regarding implementation of the Clean Water Act and other key environmental laws at the national, state, and local levels. For more than a decade, he was one of the principal lobbyists involved in Clean Water Act reauthorization efforts and the debate over proposed oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Dean Adler has also served on a number of major national advisory boards and collaborative efforts, including the Federal Advisory Committee on TMDLs (Total Maximum Daily Loads under the Clean Water Act), the Task Force on Assessing Costs of Unfunded Federal Mandates of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, the Management Advisory Group to the EPA Assistant Administrator for Water, and Water Quality 2000, of which he was the vice chair, and the Political Advisory Committee of the League of Conservation Voters.
Before entering academia, Dean Adler practiced environmental law in various capacities for 15 years. He was a Senior Attorney and Clean Water Program Director at the Natural Resources Defense Council in Washington, D.C. In that capacity, he was also the founding Chair of the Clean Water Network. Previously, Mr. Adler was a staff attorney and later Executive Director of Trustees for Alaska, a nonprofit public interest environmental law firm in Anchorage, and an Assistant Attorney General and Assistant Counsel with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources. Prior to and during law school, he worked for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Environmental Defense Fund, and the Environmental Law Institute. He has also served as a consultant for the National Academy of Public Administration; the Environmental Law Institute; several national, statewide and local environmental organizations; and other entities.
Dean Adler has co-authored or contributed chapters to fourteen books on environmental law and policy, including a book on the history and impact of the Clean Water Act, an environmental law casebook (Environmental Law: A Conceptual and Pragmatic Approach (with David Driesen, 2nd ed. Wolters Kluwer, 2011), and most recently, Modern Water Law: Private Property, Public Rights, and Environmental Protections (with Noah Hall and Robin Craig, Foundation Press, 2013). Dean Adler has also published dozens of articles and reports in law reviews and in policy journals regarding the Clean Water Act and other aspects of environmental law, including issues involving water pollution, watershed protection, water law and policy, federalism, administrative law, environmental crimes, environmental law and science, and other issues.
Dean Adler has been the recipient of several notable awards and other recognition for his contribution to the field of environmental law and policy at the national and local levels. At the national level, he was a co-recipient of the National Performance Review "Hammer Award" from Vice President Al Gore as a member of EPA Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO) Negotiating Team, which successfully negotiated a national permitting policy for CSOs in the face of a protracted and heated dispute. He also received the President's Award from America's Clean Water Foundation on the Twentieth Anniversary of the Clean Water Act. In Utah, he has received the Pfeifferhorn Award, presented by a coalition of Utah environmental groups for environmental leadership and volunteer activities (2002), and the University of Utah College of Law's Peter W. Billings Excellence in Teaching Award (1999-2000). Dean Adler has served on a number of boards and advisory boards of national and local environmental organizations, including the League of Conservation Voters, Hawkwatch International, and Friends of Great Salt Lake.
Robert Adler
University of Utah
S.J. Quinney College of Law
Salt Lake City, UT
801.581.6571
email
website
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Robert L. Glicksman is the J. B. and Maurice C. Shapiro Professor of Environmental Law at the George Washington University Law School. He is a member of the board of directors of the Center for Progressive Reform.
Professor Glicksman has expertise in both of the two main branches of environmental law, pollution control and public natural resources law. His recent research has focused largely on climate change issues, public natural resources issues, and the intersection of the two. He has taught three different environmental law courses -- a survey course covering both of these branches and more specialized courses in regulation of air and water pollution and toxic substances and hazardous waste regulation. He also regularly teaches property law (including regulatory takings cases involving environmental controls) and administrative law. Professor Glicksman has written on all of these topics for more than 25 years.
Professor Glicksman worked in private practice for four years after graduating from the Cornell Law School. He practiced for Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton, a nationally recognized law firm with an office in Washington, D.C., serving industrial clients in the energy and chemical industries. Professor Glicksman returned to private practice in 1993-94 while on leave from the University of Kansas. During that time, he worked for Lowenstein Sandler, a firm in Roseland, N.J. with a thriving environmental law practice, providing advice to clients on hazardous waste-related issues.
In addition to his experiences in private practice, Professor Glicksman served as a consultant to the Secretariat for the Commission for Environmental Cooperation. The CEC is an international organization established by the North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation (the environmental side agreement to NAFTA) on issues pertaining to the resolution of international disputes among Canada, Mexico, and the United States on issues of both domestic and international environmental law. Professor Glicksman's role was to provide advice concerning the proper disposition of submissions by NGOs seeking a finding by the CEC that the signatory parties have failed to effectively enforce their environmental laws.
Professor Glicksman has published widely in the areas of pollution control, public natural resources management, and administrative law. His book Risk Regulation At Risk: Restoring a Pragmatic Balance (Stanford University Press 2003, with Sidney Shapiro), takes issue with the notion that economic efficiency should be the sole or even principal criterion governing the establishment and implementation of laws and regulations designed to reduce the health and environmental risks attributable to industrial activities. The authors urge instead a pragmatic approach to risk regulation that takes into account other values. Professor Glicksman is the lead co-author of an environmental law casebook, Environmental Protection: Law and Policy (Aspen Law and Business), now in its fifth edition (with Professors Markell, Buzbee, Mandelker, and Tarlock). Professor Glicksman is also the co-author (with George C. Coggins) of the leading treatise on public land and resource management, Public Natural Resources Law, (now in its second edition), as well as a student nutshell on the same subject, Modern Public Land Law (now in its third edition). He has also contributed a chapter entitled, “Federal Preemption by Inaction,” in Preemptive Choice: The Theory, Law, and Reality of Federalism’s Core Question, 2009, edited by fellow CPR Member Scholar William Buzbee, and “Environmental Law,” in Kansas Annual Survey, 2007.
Professor Glicksman's law review articles have been published in journals that include the Pennsylvania Law Review, the Northwestern University Law Review, the Duke Law Journal, the Vanderbilt Law Review, the Wake Forest Law Review, the Columbia Journal of Environmental Law, the Stanford Environmental Law Journal, the UCLA Journal of Environmental Law and Policy, the Virginia Environmental Law Journal, the Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review, the William & Mary Environmental Law & Policy Review, the Oregon Law Review, the Loyola Law Review, The Administrative Law Review, the Chicago-Kent Law Review, and the Denver University Law Review. Two of Professor Glicksman's articles on judicial review of environmental decision-making (co-authored with Christopher Schroeder, a CPR Board member), have been singled out for recognition as the best in the field for a particular year and have been republished in the Land Use & Environment Law Review. A third article by Professor Glicksman on regulatory takings was also republished in that review. Another of Professor Glicksman's articles, on the Supreme Court and its treatment of environmental law issues, was designated in 1994 by Professor William Rodgers of the University of Washington as one of the 25 best environmental law articles ever written.
Professor Glicksman was instrumental in the expansion of the environmental law curriculum at the University of Kansas School of Law. He helped to establish a certificate program in environmental and natural resources law. He is now the J.B. & Maurice C. Shapiro Professor of Environmental Law at the George Washington University Law School.
Robert Glicksman
The George Washington University Law School
2000 H Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20052
202.994.4641
Daniel Rohlf is a Professor of Law and Of Counsel, Earthrise Law Center at the Lewis & Clark Law School.
Professor Rohlf’s areas of expertise are biodiversity conservation and management; public lands management; and the intersection of law and science in environmental law.
Professor Rohlf has over 20 years of experience as a litigator, (with the past 11 years as Director of Pacific Environmental Advocacy Center at Lewis and Clark's domestic environmental law clinic), primarily in cases involving the federal Endangered Species Act.
Before entering academia, Professor Rohlf served as a Law Clerk for Justice Jay A. Rabinowitz, Alaska Supreme Court, and The Peregrine Fund to help reintroduce juvenile Peregrine Falcons into the Yellowstone ecosystem. When Professor Rohlf worked with the Center for Conservation Biology, he traveled to east Africa to consult with Ugandan officials and conduct research on Uganda's regulation of its biological resources. While working as a Legal Intern/Law Clerk at the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund, Professor Rohlf coordinated a long term project involving conservation of grizzly bears in the Lower 48 states. At the U.S. Geological Survey, Bureau of Exploration Geochemistry, Mr. Rohlf worked as a Geologic Field Assistant and Physical Science Technician.
Among others, Professor Rohlf authored the opinion for the Court in a major Clean Water Act case, Miners' Advocacy Council v. State of Alaska, 778 P.2d 1126 (AK 1989). Professor Rohlf wrote The Endangered Species Act of 1973: a Guide to Its Protections and Implementation (Stanford Environmental Law Society, 1989), which was the Winner of 1989 National Wildlife Federation Publication Award.
Professor Rohlf has written widely in the area of the conservation and biodiversity. Some of his more recent publications include, Avoiding the ‘Bare Record’: Safeguarding Meaningful Judicial Review of Federal Agency Actions, 35 Ohio N.U. L. Rev. 575 (2009); Conserving Endangered Species in an Era of Global Warming, 38 Environmental Law Reporter 10203 (2008) (co-authored with John Kostyack), reprinted in SR021 ALI-ABA 147 (2009), Can Federal Courts Save the Environment?, Forest Magazine (Winter 2007), Lessons from the Columbia River Basin: Follow the Blueprint but Avoid the Barriers, 19 Global Business Development Law Journal 195 (2006); and Key International and U.S. Laws Governing Management and Conservation of Biodiversity, Contributed essay in Principles of Conservation Biology, Third Edition (2006).
Daniel John Rohlf
School of Law of Lewis & Clark College
Portland, OR
503.768.6707
email
website
Robert R.M. Verchick holds the Gauthier ~ St. Martin Eminent Scholar Chair in Environmental Law at Loyola University New Orleans, is the Faculty Director of the Center for Environmental Law at Loyola, and is a Senior Fellow in Disaster Resilience Leadership, Tulane University. He is the President of the Center for Progressive Reform.
Verchick is an expert in climate change law, disaster law, and environmental regulation. In 2009 and 2010, he served in the Obama administration as Deputy Associate Administrator for Policy at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. In that role he helped develop climate adaptation policy for the EPA and served on President Obama's Interagency Climate Change Adaptation Task Force. In the fall of 2012, he researched climate adaptation policies in India as a Visiting Scholar at the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi, supported by a Fulbright Award.
His work has appeared in many venues, including the California Law Review, the Southern California Law Review, and the environmental law journals at Harvard, Stanford, and Berkeley. He is an author of three books, including the award-winning, Facing Catastrophe: Environmental Action for a Post-Katrina World (Harvard University Press 2010). Professor Verchick has taught as a visitor at several schools, including Peking University (China) and Aarhus University (Denmark), and has received several teaching awards. He has lectured across the United States, Europe, and Asia
Robert R.M. Verchick
Loyola University New Orleans
New Orleans, LA
504.861.5472
email
website
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Yee Huang, J.D., L.L.M, is a former CPR policy analyst.
Huang joined the staff in December 2008. Prior to that, her public interest experience had included internships with the Department of State in Vienna, Austria, and Windhoek, Namibia. She interned with the Center for International Environmental Law, researching avoided deforestation under the Kyoto Protocol. Ms. Huang also worked as a law clerk in the Water Branch of the Office of Regional Counsel for the Environmental Protection Agency, Region 3. During law school, Ms. Huang authored articles published in the University of Denver Water Law Review, the Florida Journal of International Law, and the Cardozo Law Review (with Christine A. Klein).
Ms. Huang graduated cum laude from Rice University with a B.A. in biology. She received a Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarship to study international law at the University of Kent in Brussels, Belgium, where she received an L.L.M. with distinction. Ms. Huang attended the University of Florida College of Law, where she co-chaired the 2008 Public Interest Environmental Conference and graduated cum laude.
Contact Information: 202.747.0698 ex. 6 email