Charles H. Norchi
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles H. Norchi | |
|---|---|
| Born | |
| Alma mater | Harvard College Case Western Reserve University School of Law Yale Law School |
| Occupation | International legal academic |
| Spouse | Amanda Lynch |
Charles H. Norchi is the Benjamin Thompson Professor of Law at the University of Maine School of Law, director of the Center for Oceans and Coastal Law[1] of the University of Maine School of Law, a faculty member of the Climate Change Institute[2] and Graduate School of the University of Maine, and a Visiting Scholar at Brown University's Institute at Brown for Environment and Society[3] and Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs.[4][5]
Norchi received a A.B. degree from Harvard College in 1979, where he studied Government, concentrating in international relations.[6] He received a Juris Doctor (J.D.) from Case Western Reserve University School of Law in 1986.[7] He received a Master of Laws (LL.M.) in 1989 and a Doctor of Juridical Science (J.S.D.) in 2006 from Yale Law School,[8] during which time he was a Ford Foundation Fellow, a Mellon Foundation Fellow and a Myres S. McDougal Fellow at the Law School.[9]
Academia
Norchi joined faculty of the University of Maine School of Law in 2004. There he teaches International Law; Arctic Law, Science and Policy;[10] Oceans Law and Policy;[11] Maritime Law;[12] and Interdisciplinary Complex Problem-Solving.[13]
Norchi was a human rights fellow in the Human Rights Program (HRP) at Harvard Law School[14] 2004-2005, a research fellow in the Center for Public Leadership[15] and the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation of the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University 2005-2012. He has been visiting professor at City University of Hong Kong School of Law 2010-2013 and at Peking University Law School (Beida) in 2014.[2] Norchi held teaching appointments in various undergraduate institutions, including Smith College and Sarah Lawrence College.[14]
Norchi was awarded the Fulbright-Iceland Ministry of Foreign Affairs Arctic Chair at the University of Iceland in 2018.[16][17] He is on the leadership team of a US$3 million grant by the National Science Foundation (NSF) Research Traineeship (NRT) Program to support Arctic interdisciplinary training 2020-2025.[18][19]
Norchi was President of The Society of Policy Scientists, 2020-2022.[20] He is a member of the Advisory Board of the International Association of Maritime and Port Executives (IAMPE).[21] Norchi has served as Chairperson, 2018-2021, and Treasurer, 2021-present, of the Admiralty and Maritime Law Section of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS).[22]
He was elected a Fellow of the World Academy of Art and Science in 2019.[23][24]
Journalism
Norchi covered the war in Afghanistan during the 1980's. His feature writing and commentary has appeared in the Boston Globe,[25] Cleveland Plain Dealer,[26] International Herald Tribune, Los Angeles Times[27] and New York Times.[28]
Since 2019, Norchi has been writing about the Arctic and, in particular, Greenland. His work has been published in the Portland Press Herald,[29] Global Geneva[30][31][32][33] and the Journal of the North Atlantic & Arctic[34]
Human rights and development
As Executive Director of the War Crimes Project of the Committee for a Free Afghanistan, Norchi co-directed the Independent Counsel for International Human Rights[14] with James J. Busuttil. He was the Executive Director of the International League for Human Rights.[14] Norchi was the Evaluation Team Lead for the United Nations Development Programme in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2007.[35] He has been a law and development consultant for the World Bank and private sector clients.
The Royal Asiatic Society launched a prize named after Norchi in 2024. The annual "Charles H. Norchi Prize" is awarded for the publication of a book on Afghanistan in English.[36]
Selected publications
Book
- Charles H. Norchi and Gwenaele Proutière-Maulion (eds.), Piracy in Comparative Perspective: Problems, Strategies, Law (Editions Pedone/Hart, 2012) ISBN 9781849464420
Journal articles
- 'Sea Ice and the Law of the Sea: The Myth of Article 234' (with Amanda H. Lynch), Vol. 29, No. 2 (2025) Ocean and Coastal Law Journal, pp. 367–392 ISSN 1073-8843[37]
- 'The Public Order of the Arctic: Problems and Prospects', Vol. 29, No. 2 (2024) Ocean and Coastal Law Journal, pp. 171–180 ISSN 1073-8843[38]
- 'Sanctions or sea ice: Costs of closing the Northern Sea Route' (with Michael A. Goldstein, Amanda H. Lynch and Xueke Li), Vol. 50, Article 103257 (2022) Finance Research Letters ISSN 1544-6131[39]
- 'Arctic Navigation and Climate Change: Projections from Science for the Law of the Sea' (with Amanda H. Lynch), Vol. 99 (2022), International Law Studies, pp. 491–516 ISSN 2375-2831[40]
- 'The interaction of ice and law in Arctic marine accessibility' (with Amanda H. Lynch and Xueke Li), Vol. 119, No. 26 (2022), PNAS e2202720119 ISSN 1091-6490[41]
- 'Law as Strategy: Thinking Below the State in Afghanistan', Vol. 95 (2019), International Law Studies, pp. 362–399 ISSN 2375-2831[42]
- 'The Arctic: Law, Science, and Policy' (with Paul A. Mayewski), Vol. 22, No. 2 (2017) Ocean and Coastal Law Journal, pp. 97–110 ISSN 1073-8843[43]
- 'The Arctic in the Public Order of the World Community', Vol. 22, No. 1 (2017), Ocean and Coastal Law Journal, pp. 5–21 ISSN 1073-8843[44]
- 'China and the Public Order of the Oceans', Vol. 17, No. 2 (2012), Ocean and Coastal Law Journal, pp. 197–200 ISSN 1073-8843[45]
- 'Introduction: the Deepwater Horizon Incident', Vol. 16, No. 2 (2011), Ocean and Coastal Law Journal, pp. 245–251 ISSN 1073-8843[46]
- 'Introduction: Twenty-Five Years of the Gulf of Maine Judgment', Vol. 15. No. 2 (2010), Ocean and Coastal Law Journal, pp. 177–184 ISSN 1073-8843[47]
- 'Fixing a Fractured State: A Jurisprudence for a Free Society', Vol. 18, Issue 1 (2010), Asia Pacific Law Review, pp. 95–112 ISSN 1019-2557[48]
- 'When International Law Was Made in Maine: the Gulf of Maine Judgment at 25 Years', Vol. 25, Winter (2010), Maine Bar Journal, pp. 16–24 ISSN 0885-9973[49]
- 'The Public Order of Ports', Vol. 14, No. 2 (2009), Ocean and Coastal Law Journal, pp. 155–166 ISSN 1073-8843[50]
- 'The Legal Architecture of Nation-Building: An Introduction', Vol. 60, No 2 (2008), Maine Law Review, pp. 281–307 ISSN 0025-0651[51]
- 'The Decision Seminar as an Instrument of Power and Enlightenment' (with Andrew R. Willard), Vol. 14, No. 4 (1993), Journal of Political Psychology, pp. 575–606 ISSN 1467-9221[52]
- 'Federal Extraterritoriality and Fifth Amendment Due Process' with (Lea Brilmayer), Vol. 105 (1992), Harvard Law Review, pp. 1217–1263 ISSN 0017-811X[53]
Chapters in books
- 'Geopolitics and International Law in the Arctic', (with Bjarni Már Magnússon) in Gunhild Hoogensen Gjørv, Marc Lanteigne and Horatio Sam-Aggrey (eds.), Routledge Handbook of Arctic Security (Routledge, 2019) ISBN 9781032400785
- 'The Durand Line: Unfinished business', in Edward Girardet, Jonathan Walter and William Dowell (eds.), The Essential Guide to Afghanistan 4th ed. (Crosslines Publications, 2014) ISBN 9782970092308
- 'Struggle for Dignity: Why human rights count', in Edward Girardet, Jonathan Walter and William Dowell (eds.), The Essential Guide to Afghanistan 4th ed. (Crosslines Publications, 2014) ISBN 9782970092308
- 'Piracy and the Public Order of the Oceans', in Charles H. Norchi and Gwenaele Proutière-Maulion (eds.), Piracy in Comparative Perspective: Problems, Strategies, Law (Editions Pedone/Hart, 2012) ISBN 9781849464420
- 'Culture and Law on the Durand Line: Continuity and Change', in William Ascher and Jay Heffron (eds.), Cultural Change and Persistence: New Perspectives on Development (Springer, 2010) ISBN 9780230109148
- 'Malta, Maine and Beyond: Trends in the Theory and Practice of Maritime Boundary Delimitation', in Norman A. Martínez Gutiérrez (ed.), Serving the Rule of International Maritime Law: Essays in Honour of Professor David Joseph Attard (Routledge, 2010) ISBN 9780415563987
- 'Toward the Rule of Law in Afghanistan: The Constitutive Process', in John D. Montgomery and Dennis A. Rondinelli (eds.), Beyond Reconstruction in Afghanistan: Lessons from Development Experience (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004) ISBN 9781403965110 (won the 2004 Myres S. McDougal Prize in international law)[14]
- 'Human Rights: A Global Common Interest', in Jean E. Krasno (ed.), The United Nations: Confronting the Challenges of a Global Society (Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2004) ISBN 9781588262554
- 'Challenging Sovereignty: India, TRIPS, and the WTO' (with Ulrich Camen), in John D. Montgomery and Nathan Glazer (eds.), Sovereignty Under Challenge: How Governments Respond (Routledge, 2002) ISBN 9781138514898
- 'Indigenous Knowledge as Intellectual Property', in John D. Montgomery and Alex Inkeles (eds.), Social Capital as a Policy Resource (Springer, 2001) ISBN 9780792372738
- 'The Circum-Mediterranean: From Clashing Civilizations to Transnational Arbitration', in John B. Hattendorf (ed.), Naval Strategy and Policy in the Mediterranean: Past, Present and Future (?Routledge, 2000) ISBN 9780714649917
- 'A Pivotal States Human Rights Strategy', in Robert S. Chase, Emily B. Hill and Paul Kennedy (eds.), The Pivotal States: A New Framework for U.S. Policy in the Developing World (W.W. Norton, 1999) ISBN 9780393046755
- 'The Indian National Human Rights Commission as a Value Creating Institution', in John D. Montgomery (ed.), Human Rights: Positive Policies in Asia and the Pacific Rim (Hollis Press, 1998) ISBN 9781884186097
Policy brief
- 'Algorithmic North: Weather, Security and International Law' (with Amanda H. Lynch) Geneva Centre for Security Policy Policy Brief No. 21 November 2025 ISBN 978-2-88947-440-0[54]