Claire Osborn-Wright
Associate Professor of Law and
Director, Environmental Sustainability Certificate Program
Email: ccwright@stu.edu
Phone: 305.623.2319
Mail:
St. Thomas University College of Law
Faculty Suite (209)
16401 NW 37th Ave
Miami Gardens, FL 33054
Education:
B.A., Smith College, summa cum laude
J.D., Harvard Law School, cum laude
London School of Economics and Political Science, General Degree Course
Expertise:
Environmental Law
International Law
International Trade
Property
Claire Osborn-Wright
Professor Osborn-Wright’s scholarly writings focus on property, environmental, international, international trade, and domestic violence law. Her scholarship has appeared in numerous books and journals, including the Akron Law Journal, the Georgetown Immigration Law Journal, the Journal of International Media and Entertainment Law, the Hastings Women’s Law Journal, and the Fordham Environmental Law Review. In 2000, Professor Wright was elected a member of the American Law Institute (ALI), where she has worked primarily on the ALI’s World Trade Organization (WTO) Project.
She has been a visiting scholar at the WTO in Geneva, Switzerland on two occasions, and the Chinese Rule of Law Institute in Hangzhou, China on one occasion. In addition, on numerous occasions, she has taught international law classes during the summer at the University of Nice Law School, in Nice, France, and at Zhejiang University (Guanghua) College of Law in Hangzhou, China.
Professor Wright taught at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, in San Diego, California, for sixteen years, and she was awarded tenure there in 2010. While at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, she received numerous awards for her teaching and established two innovative clinical programs, the Domestic Violence Project and the Trade Monitor Institute. The Domestic Violence Project provided pro bono legal assistance to victims of domestic violence, and the Trade Monitor Institute assisted developing countries to assert their rights in the WTO.
Prior to commencing full-time teaching at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, Professor Wright taught international trade law at Stanford Law School and the University of California, San Diego. She also was a full partner at the law firm of Baker & McKenzie, where she practiced property and international trade law for a number of years, and a full partner and the Director of the WTO Center at the consulting firm of Ernst & Young LLP. Most recently, Professor Wright has taught legal writing and essay writing for the bar at the University of San Diego School of Law, property and wills & trusts at Western New England School of Law, and property and remedies at the University of California, Irvine School of Law.
Following her graduation from law school, Professor Wright clerked for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, primarily for then-Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Scholarship
Articles:
Claire Wright, Blueprint for Survival: A New International Law Paradigm for Environmental Emergencies, 29 Fordham Envtl. L. Rev. 221 (2017).
Claire Wright, Torture at Home: Borrowing from the Torture Convention to Define Domestic Violence, 24 Hastings Women’s L. J. 457 (2013).
Claire Wright, Censoring the Censors in the WTO: Reconciling the Communitarian and Human Rights Theories of International Law, 3 J. Int’l Media & Ent. L. 17 (2010). The Journal of International Media & Entertainment Law (JIMEL) is a peer-reviewed publication of the Biederman Media and Entertainment Law Institute and the American Bar Association’s Forums on Communications Law and the Entertainment and Sports Industries.
Claire Wright, Confronting Domestic Violence Head On: The Role of Power in Domestic Relationships, 32 T. Jefferson L. Rev. 21 (2009). This symposium issue is dedicated to the Ninth Annual Women and the Law Conference entitled Confronting Domestic Violence Head On: The Role of Power in Domestic Relationship, which I coordinated.
Claire Wright, Toward a New Cultural Exemption in the WTO, chapter in MULTICULTURALISM AND INTERNATIONAL LAW: ESSAYS IN HONOUR OF EDWARD McWHINNEY 649-97 (Sienho Yee & Jacques-Yvan Morin, eds., Kominklijke Brill/Martinus Nijoff 2009).
Claire Wright, Reconciling Cultural Diversity and Free Trade in the Digital Age: A Cultural Analysis of International Trade in Content Items, 41 Akron L. Rev. 399 (2008) (reprinted in 2009-2010 ENTERTAINMENT, PUBLISHING AND THE ARTS HANDBOOK (Thomson/ West 2009) as one of the best law review articles on a media subject).
Claire Wright, Hollywood’s Disappearing Act: International Trade Remedies to Bring Hollywood Home, 39 Akron L. Rev. 739 (2006) (reprinted in 2007-2008 ENTERTAINMENT, PUBLISHING AND THE ARTS HANDBOOK (Thomson/West 2007) as one of the best law review articles on a media subject).
Claire Osborn-Wright, International Protection of Human Rights and the Evolution of the Principle of Non-Refoulement, 7 San Francisco Barrister Law Journal 16, Bar Association of San Francisco (April 1988).
Steven J. Golub and Claire Osborn-Wright, Flaws in the Interpretation of INA Section 101(a)(42) and in the Denial of Refugee Status to Cambodians in Thailand, 2 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 87 (1987).
Carol S. Osmond and Claire Wright, Regional: Customs: Marking Rule Changes Have Broad Implications, U.S. Mex. Free Trade Rep. (June 15, 1996), available at 1996 WL 10175465.
Carol S. Osmond and Claire Wright, <em>The NAFTA Marking Rules of Origin</em>, International Trade Regulation Report (January 1996), reprinted in Vol. 4:2 B&M LALDB 4/96, available at http://www.natlaw.com/pubs/spmxcu2.htm (last accessed September 18, 2006).
Claire Wright, ES TU DEBER! (Spanish translation of IT’S YOUR DUTY!: A U.S. Customs Law Primer (Baker & McKenzie 1996-2001)).
Claire Wright, GUIDE TO NAFTA VERIFICATION PROCEEDINGS (Baker & McKenzie 1996-2001).
Claire Wright, IT’S YOUR DUTY!: A U.S. Customs Law Primer (Baker & McKenzie 1994- 2001).
James W. Fossett and Claire C. Osborn, Urban Conditions, chapter in FEDERAL GRANTS AND URBAN POLICIES (University of Texas Press 1980).
James W. Fossett and Claire C. Osborn, Federal Grants in Large Sunbelt and Frostbelt Cities: An Overview, 54 Tex. Bus. Rev. 74 (1980).
Richard P. Nathan and James W. Fossett, with the assistance of Claire C. Osborn, Urban Conditions: Implications for Federal Policy, 3 Commentary Magazine 3, National Council for Urban Economic Development (April 1979).
- Property Focus for the Bar
- Wills & Trusts