About the Editors

AuthorMary Jane Angelo/Jason J. Czarnezki/William S. Eubanks II
Pages13-14
Page xiii
About the Editors
Mary Jane Angelo
Mary Jane A ngelo is a Professor of Law, Director of the Environmental a nd Land Use Law Program, and
University of Florida Research Foundation Professor at the University of Florida Levin College of Law. She
is also Aliate Faculty in both the University of Florida School of Natural Resources and Water Institute.
Mary Jane has published extensively on a va riety of environmental law topics including pesticide law,
endangered species law, water and wetlands law, sustainable agriculture, the regulation of genetically modi-
ed organisms, and the relationship between law and science. Her articles have been published in the Texas
Law Review, the Wake Forest Law Review, the George Mason Law Review, the Harvard Environmental Law
Review, Ecolog y Law Quarterly, and Environmental Law. Her forthcoming book, e Law and Ecology of
Pesticides and Pest Management, will be published by Ashgate Publishing in 2013. Mary Jane serves on two
National Academy of Sciences, National Resea rch Council Committees: e Committee on Independent
Scientic Review of Everglades Restoration Progress; and the Committee on Ec ological Risk Assessment
under FIFRA and the ESA. Mary Jane is also a member of the Vermont Law School summer faculty a nd
has taught and lectured throughout the United States and other parts of the world, including Belize, Brazil,
Costa Rica, Poland, and Urug uay. She is also a Member-Scholar with the Center for Progressive Reform
in Washington, D.C. Prior to joining academia, May Jane practiced as an environmental law yer for many
years. She served in t he U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Oce of t he Administrator and Oce of
General Counsel in Washing ton, D.C., and as Senior Assistant General Counsel for the St. Johns River
Water Management District in Florida. Her subst antial environmental law pract ice ha s included water
law, wetlands law, endangered species law, pesticides law, biotechnology law, and hazardous and toxic sub-
stances law. Mary Jane received her B.S., with High Honors, in biological sciences from Rutgers University,
and both her M.S., in Entomology, and J.D., with Honors, from the University of Florida.
Jason J. Czarnezki
Jason Czarnezki is, as of the 2013-2014 academic year, the Gilbert & Sarah Kerlin Distinguished Professor
of Environmental Law at Pace Law School. Prior to joining the Pace Law facu lty, he was Professor of Law
in the Environmental Law Center at Vermont Law School and faculty director of the U.S.-China Partner-
ship for Environmental Law. He also has held academic appointments at Marquette University Law School
and the DePaul University College of Law. Jason also served as a guest researcher at Uppsala University in
Sweden in 2011 and spent the 2009-2010 academic year as a J. William Fulbright Scholar at Sun Yat-Sen
University in Guangzhou, China. He has presented his work on environmentalism, natural resources law,
food polic y, and global climate policy at universities, public interest organizations, government institu-
tions, and conferences throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia. Previously, he served as a law clerk
to the Hon. D. Brock Hornby of the U.S. District C ourt for the Dist rict of Maine and as a law clerk for
the Bureau of Legal Services at the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. His ar ticles have been
published in the law journals of Boston College, Boston University, Stanford University, the University of
Chicago, the University of Colorado, the University of Maryland, and the University of Virginia, and he is
the author of Everyday Environmentalism: Law, Nature and Individual Behavior (ELI 2011). Jason received
his undergraduate and law degrees from the University of Chica go.
William S. Eubanks II
Bill Eubanks is a partner at one of the nation’s leading public interest environmental law rms, Meyer
Glitzenstein & Cr ystal, where he litigates complex federal environmental case s on behalf of conservation
organizations under the Endangered Species Act, National Environmental Policy Act, Clean Water Act,
National Park Service Organic Act, and other statutes. Ca ses on which he has worked include challenging
Deepwater Horizon oil spill response strategies harming sea turtles, garnering protections for endangered
Indiana bats from an industrial wind energy project, obtaining agency records regarding federa l nancing
of coal-red power facilities, forcing a reconsideration of critical habitat for the California tiger salamander,

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