Prestigious 2025 Elisabeth Haub Award for Environmental Law and Diplomacy Presented to John Knox and David Boyd for Advancing the Right to a Healthy Environment

Elisabeth Haub School of Law
Environmental

The Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University proudly conferred the 2025 Elisabeth Haub Award for Environmental Law and Diplomacy on Professor John H. Knox and Dr. David R. Boyd for their groundbreaking leadership as successive United Nations Special Rapporteurs on the human right to a healthy environment. The award was presented on October 23, 2025 at Pace University in New York City before an audience of environmental and human rights advocates and supporters joining in person and virtually from around the world.

2025 Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University Haub Award Ceremony
2025 Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University Haub Award Ceremony Haub Award Laureates
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2025 Haub Award laureates David Boyd and John Knox

The Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University proudly conferred the 2025 Elisabeth Haub Award for Environmental Law and Diplomacy on Professor John H. Knox and Dr. David R. Boyd for their groundbreaking leadership as successive United Nations Special Rapporteurs on the human right to a healthy environment. The award was presented on October 23, 2025 at Pace University in New York City before an audience of environmental and human rights advocates and supporters joining in person and virtually from around the world.

“John Knox and David Boyd are visionary leaders who laid the legal and moral groundwork for one of the most consequential developments in international environmental law: global recognition of the human right to a healthy environment,” said Horace E. Anderson, Jr., Dean of the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University and President of the Haub Award Jury. “Their work represents more than the contributions of two individuals; it symbolizes what can be achieved through sustained advocacy, diplomacy, and global cooperation.”

Pace University President Marvin Krislov lauded the laureates’ impact: “Through their work as United Nations Special Rapporteurs, they have made that right clearer, stronger, and harder to ignore. We are honored to celebrate leaders whose efforts have advanced environmental protection through law and diplomacy on the world stage.”

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2025 Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University Haub Award Ceremony Group Photo featuring faculty and award Laureates

Following introductions by Pace | Environmental Law Professors Katrina Fischer Kuh and Camila Bustos, the award was presented by Pace University Trustee Liliane Haub, a member of the Haub Award Jury, joined by members of the Haub family including Christian Haub, Marie-Liliane Haub, Anna-Sophia Haub-Singh, and Amarpreet Haub-Singh. “Through their leadership and collaboration, Professor Knox and Dr. Boyd have helped turn a powerful idea into a recognized international right: clean air, safe water, and a healthy planet for all,” said Ms. Haub.

John H. Knox, Henry C. Lauerman Professor of International Law at Wake Forest University, served from 2012–2018 as the UN’s first Independent Expert and later the first Special Rapporteur on the human right to a healthy and environment. His mandate culminated in the Framework Principles on Human Rights and the Environment, clarifying states’ obligations to protect the environment under existing human rights law and foregrounding non-discrimination and protection of environmental defenders.

David R. Boyd, a professor at the University of British Columbia, served as Special Rapporteur from 2018–2024. He built a global coalition of governments, UN agencies, and more than 1,300 civil society organizations, filed amicus briefs in landmark cases, and produced over 30 UN reports documenting how recognition of the right is driving cleaner air and water, stronger laws, biodiversity protection, and climate action.

Together, Knox and Boyd helped catalyze the UN Human Rights Council (2021) and UN General Assembly (2022) resolutions recognizing the human right to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment, momentum reinforced this year by the International Court of Justice’s advisory opinion which affirmed the right as part of international law.

Through their leadership and collaboration, Professor Knox and Dr. Boyd have helped turn a powerful idea into a recognized international right: clean air, safe water, and a healthy planet for all.

—Liliane Haub

A highlight of the event was a timely and thought-provoking panel discussion titled “Advancing the Right to a Healthy Environment” moderated by Professor Smita Narula, Haub Distinguished Professor of International Law and Co-Director of the Global Center for Environmental Legal Studies at Pace Haub Law.

The conversation brought together the Laureates with Ambassador Maritza Chan Valverde, Permanent Representative of Costa Rica to the United Nations, to reflect on the evolution of the right to a healthy environment, tracing its journey from a long-contested aspiration to a now universally recognized norm of international law. The panelists discussed the global momentum that followed the United Nations General Assembly’s 2022 resolution affirming the right, and the subsequent role of states, courts, and communities in implementing it. The discussion emphasized the critical importance of transforming legal recognition into meaningful action, ensuring that the right protects those most vulnerable to environmental harm and drives real-world improvements in air, water, and land quality.

Dr. Boyd highlighted the practical implications of the right, noting that its recognition “moves environmental protection from something governments might consider to something they are obligated to deliver,” underscoring how it serves as a powerful legal and moral tool for achieving cleaner, safer, and more sustainable communities worldwide.

The panelists emphasized that realizing the promise of this right requires collaboration among governments, civil society, and international institutions, and that the growing global consensus reflects not only progress in law, but also in justice and equity.

In closing, the panelists encouraged law students and young lawyers to take inspiration from the collective action that led to the UN’s recognition of the right. “Never underestimate the power of collaboration and conviction,” said Ambassador Chan Valverde. “Every generation has the chance to make international law stronger, fairer, and more reflective of our shared humanity—and that work begins with you.”

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Professor Margot J. Pollans Appointed Gilbert and Sarah Kerlin Distinguished Professor of Environmental Law at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University

Elisabeth Haub School of Law
Environmental

The Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University is proud to announce the appointment of Professor Margot J. Pollans as the Gilbert and Sarah Kerlin Distinguished Professor of Environmental Law.

Professor Margot Pollans, Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University
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Margot Pollans

The Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University is proud to announce the appointment of Professor Margot J. Pollans as the Gilbert and Sarah Kerlin Distinguished Professor of Environmental Law.

“Professor Pollans exemplifies the excellence, innovation, and leadership that define the Pace | Haub Environmental Law Program,” said Horace E. Anderson Jr., Dean of the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University. “Her scholarship has not only deepened our understanding of environmental governance and sustainable food systems, but also strengthened Pace Haub Law’s national and international reputation as a leader in environmental law education and policy. Equally important, she has demonstrated exceptional service to the Law School by mentoring students, leading initiatives, and contributing to key faculty committees. This appointment is a well-deserved recognition of her remarkable impact on our community.”

Professor Pollans exemplifies the excellence, innovation, and leadership that define the Pace | Haub Environmental Law Program.

–Horace E. Anderson Jr., Dean of the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University

Since joining the Pace Haub Law faculty in 2015, Professor Pollans has been an integral part of the community as an innovative scholar, inspiring teacher, and collaborative colleague. She currently serves as Faculty Director of the Pace Food Law Center and Joseph P. D’Alessandro Faculty Scholar. Previously, she held the designations of James D. Hopkins Professor of Law from 2023–2025 and Shamik and Adrienne Trivedi Faculty Scholar from 2020–2022.

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 work has been published in leading journals, including the California Law Review, Michigan Law Review, Ohio State Law Journal, Columbia Journal of Gender and Law, and the Harvard Environmental Law Review. She is also the co-author of the casebook Food Law: Cases & Materials. In 2022, she received the Law School’s prestigious Goettel Prize for Faculty Scholarship for her article “Eaters, Powerless by Design” (120 Mich. L. Rev. 643 (2022)). Recently, she and co-author Noa Ben-Asher, Professor of Law at St. John’s University School of Law, were selected as 2025 Dukeminier Awards Winners for their article, “Gender Regrets: Banning Abortion and Gender-Affirming Care” (Utah L. Rev. 763 (2024)).

Beyond her scholarship, Professor Pollans has been a driving force in shaping Pace Haub Law’s national presence in the field of food and agriculture law. Under her leadership, the Pace Food Law Center has become a hub for interdisciplinary research and advocacy at the intersection of food, climate, and justice. She is part of the Farm Bill Law Enterprise, a national collaboration of law school programs working toward a more equitable, sustainable, and health-focused farm bill.

Prior to joining Pace Haub Law, Professor Pollans was the inaugural academic fellow at UCLA School of Law’s Resnick Program for Food Law and Policy and served as a Staff Attorney and Clinical Teaching Fellow at Georgetown University Law Center’s Institute for Public Representation, where she worked on environmental litigation and supervised student clinicians. She clerked for the Honorable David Tatel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and, in 2017, was recognized as one of the “40 Under 40 Rising Stars in Food Policy” by the NYC Food Policy Center.

The Gilbert and Sarah Kerlin Distinguished Professorship in Environmental Law was established to honor faculty who exemplify the highest standards of environmental legal scholarship and leadership. Created in honor of Gilbert and Sarah Kerlin, the endowment supports the Kerlin Professorship and the annual Kerlin Lecture on Environmental Law, helping expand Pace Haub Law’s programs in environmental research, education, and scholarly activity. Professor Nicholas A. Robinson was named the first Kerlin Distinguished Professor in 1999, followed by Professor Jason J. Czarnezki in 2013. Professor Pollans now continues this legacy of excellence and impact.

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