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Noga Morag-Levine is a Professor and George Roumell Faculty Scholar at the Michigan State University College of Law. Her teaching spans Environmental Law, Constitutional Law, and the Regulatory State. Morag-Levine's scholarship integrates environmental regulation, legal history, and comparative law, notably examining common-law concepts and public health interventions. Her research critiques the evolution of Anglo-American environmental regimes in the context of British and American historical periods and contemporary environmental issues. As an author, she has contributed numerous articles to prestigious journals such as the Law and History Review and the American Journal of Comparative Law, and she has authored the book "Chasing Wind: Regulating Air Pollution in the Common Law State" (Princeton University Press, 2003). Currently, she is working on a book provisionally titled "Elsewhere: Relocation, Mitigation, and the Long History of Pollution Injustice." Before her position at MSU, she was an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Michigan and a Visiting Fellow at Princeton University's Program in Law and Public Affairs. Morag-Levine completed her Ph.D. in Jurisprudence and Social Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and graduated cum laude from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Faculty of Law.
University of Michigan • Ann Arbor, MI
Taught courses in Political Science, focusing on the intersection of law and environmental policy.
Princeton University • Princeton, NJ
Participated in the Program in Law and Public Affairs, contributing to discussions on legal frameworks and public policy.
Department of Psychology