Distinguished Professor of law and Nathan L. Jacobs
Scholar
Professor Green received a B.A. in philosophy from Tufts University and a
J.D. from Yale Law School, where he was a notes editor of the Yale
Law Journal. After law school, he clerked for judge Pamela Ann
Rymer of the
U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in Los Angeles and then served as an
associate with Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering in Washington, D.C. From
1995-2008, he taught at the Louisiana State University Law Center. He
has been a visiting professor at the University of Michigan Law School,
and in 2002-03 was a
Fulbright Distinguished Scholar in the United Kingdom.
Green's book Lying,
Cheating, and Stealing: A Moral Theory of White Collar Crime
received the National White-Collar Crime Center's Outstanding
Publication Award
and has been translated into several languages. His latest books are Philosophical
Foundations of Criminal Law (with coeditor R.A. Duff) and
Thirteen Ways to Steal a Bicycle: Theft Law in the Information Age. His current research
focuses on vice and crime.
Professor Green is a member of the
editorial boards of Criminal Law and Philosophy and the New
Criminal Law Review and a manuscript reviewer for several
university presses. He has also served as a consultant to the Law
Commission for England and Wales.
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