Stuart P. Green

Professor of Law &
Justice Nathan L. Jacobs Scholar
Rutgers University School of Law-Newark
123 Washington Street
Newark, NJ 07102-3026
tel. (973) 353-3006
sgreen@kinoy.rutgers.edu

 

 

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Curriculum Vitae

 

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Courses

Criminal Adjudication

 

Corporate and White Collar Crime

 

Criminal Law

 

Criminal Law Theory

 
 

My Books

Lying, Cheating, and Stealing: A Moral Theory of White Collar Crime

 

I Crimini dei Colletti Bianchi: Mentire e rubare tra diritto e morale

Defining Crimes: Essays on the Special Part of the Criminal Law (Oxford Monographs on Criminal Law and Justice)

Defining Crimes: Essays on the Special Part of the Criminal Law (co-edited with R.A. Duff)

And check out . . .

The cover of bagels and grits is beige, with the business end of a gator's tail at upper left. The title is in spiky red type.

Bagels and Grits: A Jew on the Bayou -- by Jennifer Moses

 

 

Stuart Green is a Professor of Law at Rutgers Law School-Newark,  where he teaches courses in Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Corporate and White Collar Crime, and Criminal Law Theory.  He previously taught at Louisiana State University Law School and has served as a Visiting Professor at the University of Michigan Law School (Fall 2005) and as a Fulbright Distinguished Scholar at the University of Glasgow School of Law (2002-03).

Professor Green is a 1988 graduate of the Yale Law School, where he was a Notes Editor of the Yale Law Journal.  Following graduation from law school, he clerked for Judge Pamela Ann Rymer of the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and U.S. District Court, in Los Angeles. From 1990-95, he practiced law with the firm of Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, in Washington, D.C.

He is co-editor, with Professor R.A. Duff, of Defining Crimes: Essays on the Special Part of the Criminal Law (Oxford University Press, 2005), and author of Lying, Cheating, and Stealing: A Moral Theory of White Collar Crime (OUP, 2006), which received the 2005-08 Outstanding Publication Award from the National White Collar Crime Center/White Collar Crime Research Consortium. He is currently working on two new book projects: a monograph tentatively titled Thirteen Ways to Steal a Bicycle: Theft Law in the Information Age (under contract with Harvard University Press); and a collection of essays (co-edited with Antony Duff) entitled Philosophical Foundations of Criminal Law  (under contract with OUP).

His work on topics such as corporate and white collar crime, criminal law codification, comparative criminal law, victims’ rights, strict liability, justified homicide, plagiarism, private prosecutions, and the criminal law’s Special Part has appeared in a wide array of student- and peer-edited publications, including the Yale, Michigan, Hastings, Illinois, North Carolina, Tulane, and Emory Law Journals, the American Criminal Law Review, Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology, Law and Philosophy, Criminal Law Forum, Criminal Law & Philosophy, Criminal Justice Ethics, Buffalo Criminal Law Review, and the books, Appraising Strict Liability (OUP) and International Handbook of White Collar Crime (Kluwer).

Professor Green is a member of the editorial boards of the journals Criminal Law and Philosophy and the New Criminal Law Review.  He has given numerous lectures throughout the United States and Europe, and has been quoted and had op-ed pieces on issues in criminal justice and ethics in a wide range of national and local media.  He has also served as a consultant to the Law Commission of England and Wales, as Chair of the Association of American Law School’s Sections on Criminal Justice and on Comparative Law, and as a member of Louisiana’s Task Force on Indigent Defense.

He lives in Montclair, New Jersey, with his wife, Jennifer Moses, and their three children.