College of Law News
Professor Natsu Taylor Saito recognized for outstanding scholarship
May 19, 2008
Established to recognize faculty excellence in scholarly research, the award was named in memory of one of the faculty's most prolific scholars, the late Patricia Morgan. Morgan joined the College of Law's faculty in 1988, and was honored as Professor of the Year in 1993 and 2002. Her textbooks, Tax Procedure & Tax Fraud in a Nutshell and Cases and Materials on Tax Procedure and Tax Fraud, are used at law schools throughout the country. Faculty award recipients receive a $12,500 summer research grant and a course release during the next academic year. In the last two years, Saito published a book, From Chinese Exclusion to Guantánamo Bay: Plenary Power and the Prerogative State (University Press of Colorado, 2007), served as guest editor for an issue of the New Centennial Review, and authored five articles that have been published or are forthcoming. Saito joined the College of Law faculty in 1994. She teaches international law and human rights, race and the law, immigration, criminal procedure, and professional responsibility, and is an advisor to the Asian American Law Student Association and the Hispanic Student Bar Association. Professor Saito's scholarship focuses on the legal history of race in the United States, the plenary power doctrine as applied to immigrants, American Indians, and U.S. territorial possessions, and the human rights implications of U.S. governmental policies, particularly with regard to the suppression of political dissent. Professor Saito graduated from Swarthmore College in 1977 and received a Masters of Education from Georgia State University in 1982. She worked as a community organizer for the South DeKalb Community Center from 1977-1980, then taught social studies at Horizons School and English as a Second Language for the Adult Education Department of the Atlanta Board of Education. In recent years, Saito said, she has been particularly frustrated by the United States' simultaneous reliance upon and disregard for the global rule of law in its "War on Terror." What struck her in researching this issue is how often we've encountered parallel situations and justifications in our history. "As a result, my current book project, We Have Met the Enemy: American Exceptionalism and Subversion of the Rule of Law (NYU Press), is an attempt to better understand this phenomenon," she explained, "by tracing the legal and ideological explanations offered throughout U.S. history for both invoking and violating international law." Having a "warped sense of fun," Saito said she would probably be doing the work she does anyway, but it is made considerably easier by "the College of Law's commitment to faculty research and by the Patricia Morgan Scholarship, which is particularly meaningful to me because of my tremendous respect for Pat's work. I hope I can do justice to her memory." The first Patricia T. Morgan Award for Outstanding Faculty Scholarship was presented to co-recipients Professors Mark Budnitz and Doug Yarn in 2005. Professor Bill Edmundson won the award in 2006, and Professor Neil Kinkopf was the 2007 recipient of the award.
|

