Kathryn Kovacs joined the Rutgers Law School faculty in 2011. She teaches Administrative Law, Natural Resources Law, and Property.
Prior to joining the Rutgers faculty, she spent 12 years
in the U.S. Department of Justice's Environment and Natural Resources
Division, Appellate Section. She wrote more than 100 appellate and
Supreme Court briefs and argued more than 60 appeals in all 13
of the federal circuit courts of appeals, twice en banc, and in
three state supreme courts. Her cases covered a wide range of areas
including environmental, administrative, and constitutional law, both
civil and criminal. Among other cases, Professor Kovacs defended the
Navy's use of low-frequency active sonar and the display of a Latin
cross in the Mojave National Preserve; she prosecuted crimes under the
Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act; she pursued a claim to compensate
the Oneida Indians for the State of New York's unlawful purchase of
their land in the early 19th century; and she defended the Endangered
Species Act against Fifth Amendment takings claims.
In 2016, Professor Kovacs was a political appointee serving as senior adviser to the director of the Bureau of Land Management in the U.S.
Department of the Interior. She also spent three years litigating
primarily constitutional claims as an attorney in the Baltimore City Law
Department, and she clerked for the Hon. Robert C. Murphy, former
Chief Judge of the Maryland Court of Appeals. Professor Kovacs is a cum laude graduate of Yale University and the Georgetown University Law Center.