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williaj2@slu.edu 314.977.2786
Curriculum Vitae
Media Inquiries:
314.977.7248
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EDUCATION
B.A., Augustana College, 1984
M.A., Duke University, 1987
J.D., Duke
Law School, 1987,
Order of Coif
AREAS OF EXPERTISE
Administrative Law
Biodiversity
Constitutional Law
Energy, Economy, Environment
Environmental Law
Land Use Law
National Resources Legislation
OSHA
Torts
COURSES
Environmental Law
International Environmental Law
Administrative Law
Constitutional Law
Land Use Control
Natural Resources
Torts
Seminars on Environmental Law Topics |
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| Douglas R. Williams |
Faculty
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Professor of Law
A “life of the mind” type of person, Douglas Williams appreciates the
heavily interdisciplinary nature of environmental law. “Environmental
law opens up avenues of learning and understanding that may not
have been apparent initially,” he says. “You have to know a little bit
about economics, basic sciences, atmospheric chemistry, biology. It’s
incredibly complex and fascinating.”
Professor Williams has explored environmental law from both sides
of the table. While in private practice, his firm represented the Exxon
Shipping Company in connection with the Valdez oil spill in Alaskan
waters in 1989. Preferring to “wear the white hat,” Williams is now a
consulting counsel to the Sierra Club and other environmental groups. In
a recent case, he helped the Sierra Club convince the 7th Circuit Court of
Appeals that the Environmental Protection Agency’s implementation of
the Clean Air Act in St. Louis was improper and unlawful.
Much of Williams’ scholarship examines enforcement of the Clean Air
Act and other environmental regulations. He has written extensively
about the relationship between state and federal regulators and voluntary versus
regulatory approaches to environmental protection. Professor
Williams has several manuscripts in progress and his book, Federal
Wetlands Regulation, will be published in 2004.
“Unlike many areas of law, environmental law really wasn’t born until
the late 1960s,” he says. “We’ve only had about 40 years of experience
in trying to fashion a body of legal principals and laws to reorient our
relationship to natural resources.”
A former rock musician, carpenter and a graduate of Duke Law School,
Professor Williams clerked for the Honorable Douglas H. Ginsburg
on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. He
became an associate with Covington & Burling in Washington, D.C., in
1988 at a time when the federal government began asserting claims for
damages to natural resources. Professor Williams was among the first
attorneys to develop an expertise in this area. His initial scholarship
focused on the problem of placing monetary values on natural resources.
While in private practice, Williams also represented clients pro bono in
post-conviction death penalty proceedings and he maintains an interest
in constitutional law, particularly congressional powers. He joined the
School of Law in 1991.
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