Elisabeth Haub School of Law News
Elisabeth Haub School of Law News
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Press ReleaseOctober 30, 2025
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StudentsNovember 14, 2025
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Press ReleaseNovember 6, 2025
In the Media
Latest News
Faculty Director of the Environmental Law Program and Professor Katrina Fischer Kuh writes a piece in Times Union about how New York’s Green Amendment can be used to advance environmental protections when regulatory processes stall. Drawing on a recent decision involving agricultural runoff into Owasco Lake, Professor Kuh explains how constitutional environmental rights can help enforce existing laws that protect water quality and public health.
Law Professor Todd Ommen provides a legal analysis to The Croton Chronicle following a judge’s dismissal of a lawsuit seeking to limit nighttime train noise at the Croton-Harmon rail yard. Professor Ommen says his team is disappointed with the ruling and plans to appeal.
The Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University is pleased to announce that four new members have joined its Board of Visitors. All four members, Jerome Abelman’93, Westchester District Attorney Susan Cacace ’89, Lauren Enea ’16, and Sapna Palla ’98, are distinguished Pace Haub Law alumni.
A team of student advocates from the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University reached the semifinals of the VI Moot de Derecho Ambiental Científica, a fully Spanish-language international environmental law competition hosted by the Universidad Científica del Sur in Lima, Peru. Pace Haub Law was the first American law school to place as a finalist in the competition, finishing third overall in the written submissions and fifth overall in the Competition.
At the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University, the eight-Week Group Wellness Coaching Workshop represents a sustained, skills-based approach to student wellbeing where wellness is a key component of a law students’ professional formation.
Faculty and leadership from the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University participated in the American Association of Law Schools (AALS) Annual Meeting, held January 6–9, 2026, in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Professor Bennett L. Gershman of Pace Law School writes in Law.com on the enduring impact of racial discrimination in jury selection. In the op-ed “Race Discrimination Still Infects Jury Trials,” published in the New York Law Journal, Bennett L. Gershman examines how racial bias continues to shape capital jury trials and critiques courts’ willingness to excuse such practices, arguing that racial justice must not be sacrificed for procedural convenience.
Professor Bennett L. Gershman, distinguished professor at Pace University’s Elisabeth Haub School of Law, appears in Salon discussing why accountability for the January 6 insurrection ultimately collapsed. In the article “We Learned Nothing From Jan. 6,” Bennett L. Gershman explains that while the indictments against former President Trump were strong and supported by overwhelming evidence, the complexities and timing of the prosecution — coupled with Trump’s election — allowed him to evade accountability.
Professor Gershman also publishes several op-eds in amNewYork, including a critique of CBS News pulling a 60 Minutes segment on alleged abuses at El Salvador’s CECOT prison, raising concerns about journalistic independence. In another piece, he argues President Trump’s recent military actions violate U.S. and international law, and in a year-end reflection he reviews major criminal justice developments from 2025.
Law Professor Emeritus Merril Sobie writes an op-ed in the New York Law Journal examining how delays in New York family court permanency hearings can deny children timely stability and disrupt family reunification. He explains that when cases drag on, appellate review is often blocked by the mootness doctrine—meaning key legal decisions affecting children’s lives may never receive meaningful oversight. Sobie calls for reforms to strengthen statutory protections for timely permanency and ensure the courts remain accountable in child welfare proceedings.
Law Reviews, Blogs, and Magazines
Haub Law faculty, staff, and students publish a wide range of scholarly books, articles, and blogs about the law and policy.