About the Authors

AuthorRobin Kundis Craig/Stephen R. Miller
Pages13-18
xiii
About the Authors
Robin Kundis Craig is the William H. Leary Professor of Law at the Uni-
versity of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law. Af ter earning a Ph.D. at U.C.
Santa Barbara in English Literature and an independent master’s degree from
the Johns Hopkins University’s Writing Seminars in Writing About Science,
Professor Craig attended the Lewis & Clark School of Law in Portland, Ore-
gon, from which she graduated summa cum laude and rst in her class. At
the University of Utah, Professor Craig is a lso aliated with the College of
Law’s Stegner Center for Land, Resources, and Environment and a faculty
aliate of the University of Uta h’s Global Change & Sustainability Center.
Professor Craig’s research focuses on “all things water,” especially the impact
of climate change on freshwater resources and the oceans, the Clean Water
Act, and the intersection of water and energy law. She also has written several
articles and book chapters on constitutional environmental law, administra-
tive law, and statutory interpretation. She is the author, co-author, or editor
of 10 books and the author or co -author of over 100 law review articles and
book chapters.
Stephen R. Miller is Associate Professor of Law at the University of Idaho
College of Law. Professor Miller’s academic works have been published by
or are forthcoming from Ca mbridge University Press, the Harvard Environ-
mental Law Review, the Harvard Journal on Legislation, and a number of
other law reviews and professional journals. His article, “Legal Neighbor-
hoods,” was selected to be reprinted in the Land Use and Environmental Law
Review, an annual, peer-selected compendium of the 10 best land use and
environmental law ar ticles of the year. He is also the director of the Col-
lege of Law’s Economic Development Clinic, through which he is principal
investigator on a three-year, $240,000 grant from the U.S. Forest Service and
the Idaho Department of Lands to develop legal and code-based strategies
to reduce the impact of w ildre on the built environment. Professor Miller
received his undergraduate degree from Brown University, an M.A. in City
and Regional Planning from the University of California, Berkeley, and his
J.D. from the University of California, Hastings College of Law.
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