Inundations: Pain, Bodies, and the LawDelivered by Professor Margot J.
Pollans, James D. Hopkins Professor of Law 2023-2025Professor Pollans'
lecture will focus on how the boundaries of human bodies have always
been porous, but one of the conditions of modernity is an acceleration
of inputs. Among other things, toxic chemicals, bullets, noise, and
information flood human bodies. Some of these intrusions are harmless.
Others may even be beneficial. But many cause extraordinary
psychological and physical pain. In the United States today, dominant
legal structures eschew attempts to prevent intrusion and instead
emphasize: 1) individual and institutional options to engage in
private shielding, and 2) mechanisms for post-intrusion cleanup. This
structure operates in substantive public health and safety laws. It is
also replicated through administrative law, which stymies potential
reform through a series of procedural and methodological choices that
overwhelm regulators and devalue information about actual human
experiences such as pain.About Professor Margot J. Pollans Image
Professor Margot Pollans joined Haub Law’s faculty in 2015. She is
the Faculty Director of the Pace Food Law Center and also the James D.
Hopkins Professor of Law for the 2023–2025 academic years.
Previously, she served as the Shamik and Adrienne Trivedi Faculty
Scholar from 2020-2022. She teaches several classes including
Agriculture Law and the Environment LAW 920, Food Systems & the
Environment Law LAW 806, and Environmental Law Survey LAW 856.During
her time at Haub Law she has been a leader in building the national
reputation of the Pace Food Law Center. She is also part of the Farm
Bill Law Enterprise, a national partnership of law school programs
working toward a farm bill that reflects the long-term needs of our
society, including economic opportunity and stability, public health
and nutrition, climate change mitigation and adaptation, public
resources stewardship, and racial and socioeconomic justice.Professor
Pollans is an accomplished scholar whose primary research interests
lie in the areas of food and agriculture law, administrative law and
social justice. Her academic work has appeared in a variety of
journals including in the California Law Review, Michigan Law Review,
the Ohio State Law Journal, the Columbia Journal of Gender and Law,
and the Harvard Environmental Law Review. She is also the co-author of
a casebook, Food Law: Cases & Materials. In 2022, she was named the
recipient of Haub Law’s distinguished Goettel Prize for Faculty
Scholarship for her article, "Eaters, Powerless by Design" published
by Michigan Law Review (120 Mich. L. Rev. 643 (2022)).Before joining
Haub Law, Professor Pollans was the inaugural academic fellow at UCLA
School of Law’s Resnick Program for Food Law and Policy. Previously,
she was a Staff Attorney and Clinical Teaching Fellow at Georgetown
University Law Center’s Institute for Public Representation, where
she worked on a range of environmental litigation and supervised
student clinicians. Following law school, Pollans clerked for the
Honorable David Tatel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C.
Circuit. In 2017 she was named “40 Under 40 Rising Stars in Food
Policy” by the NYC Food Policy Center.About the James D. Hopkins
Professor of Law Memorial LectureThe James D. Hopkins Professor of Law
is an endowed chair established with contributions from alumni of
Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University and members of the
legal community to honor Judge James D. Hopkins who served as Interim
Dean of the Law School in 1982–1983. The title of James D. Hopkins
Professor of Law is held by a distinguished member of the faculty for
a two-year term in recognition of outstanding scholarship and
teaching. The James D. Hopkins Professor Memorial Lecture is delivered
by the honoree during their term to the law school community and
public.This event is free and open to the public. Please register
below.This is an in person event. 1 PD credit will be awarded to
students who attend.
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10/07/2025 Last update