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Joseph Sax

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Name
  
Joseph Sax


Role
  
Professor

Joseph Sax wwwtrbimgcomimg531e7339turbinelame0310jos

Died
  
March 9, 2014, San Francisco, California, United States

Books
  
Mountains Without Handrails, Playing Darts with a Rembra, Legal control of water res, Defending the environment, Mountains Without Handrails

Joseph Lawrence Sax (February 3, 1936 – March 9, 2014) was an environmental law professor, known for developing the public trust doctrine.

Contents

Joseph Sax senateuniversityofcaliforniaedufilesinmemoria

Born and raised in Chicago, Sax graduated from Harvard University in 1957 and then earned a law degree in 1959 from the University of Chicago Law School. After a few years in private practice and at the Department of Justice he began teaching, first with the University of Colorado in 1962 and then at the University of Michigan in 1965. He joined the University of California, Berkeley School of Law in 1986.

From 1994 to 1996, Sax worked with the Clinton Administration under Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt.

Sax was involved in environmental and conservation law from early in his career, working with the Sierra Club in Colorado. drafting Michigan's environmental law (known as the "Sax Act") and working on a variety of water resource cases in California.

It was while he was teaching law students at the University of Colorado that he realized that there was no satisfactory theory accounting for the public interest in natural resources law, and that his work was "grooming lawyers who might one day help companies extract resources, mainly from public lands."

Works

Books
  • Playing Darts With a Rembrandt: Public and Private Rights to Cultural Treasures (1999)
  • Mountains Without Handrails
  • Water Law--Planning and Policy
  • Water Law--Cases and Commentary
  • Defending the Environment
  • Scholarly articles
  • "The Public Trust Doctrine in Natural Resource Law: Effective Judicial Intervention", 68 Michigan Law Review 471 (1970)
  • Awards

  • Blue Planet Prize - 2007, from the Asahi Glass Foundation ("likened to a Nobel for environmental science")
  • American Academy of Arts and Sciences, fellow
  • Distinguished Faculty Achievement Award, University of Michigan
  • Elizabeth Haub Environmental Prize of the Free University of Brussels
  • Audubon Society's Conservationist of the Year Award
  • William O. Douglas Legal Achievement Award from the Sierra Club
  • Environmental Quality Award of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
  • References

    Joseph Sax Wikipedia