Paul M. Kurtz
Associate Dean and J. Alton Hosch Professor of Law
B.A, J.D., Vanderbilt University
LL.M., Harvard University
Courses Offered:
Criminal Law
Family Law
Professional Biographical Information:
Paul
M. Kurtz has been a member of the University of Georgia School of
Law since 1975, specializing in criminal law and family law. He has
served as the law school's associate dean since 1991 and was named to a
prestigious endowed position as the J. Alton Hosch Professor of Law in
1994.
As associate dean for academic and
student affairs, Kurtz affects many aspects of faculty and student
life. He supervises the law school's academic program and curriculum.
It is he who decides who will teach a course, and where and when it
will be taught. He also develops the law school's academic calendar and
hires adjunct professors. In addition, Kurtz advises the dean,
represents the school at events when the dean cannot be present and
assists the institutional advancement team in alumni relations and
fundraising efforts.
Kurtz's scholarship includes two books, Family Law: Cases, Text, Problems (with Professors Ira Ellman, Elizabeth Scott, Brian Bix and Lois Weithorn) and Criminal Offenses and Defenses in Georgia. He also serves as associate editor and a board of editors member for the Family Law Quarterly. In this capacity, he publishes his "Annual Survey of Periodical Literature" in the Family Law Quarterly.
Very
active in legislative issues, Kurtz served as reporter for the Georgia
Supreme Court's Indigent Defense Reform Commission (2000-03), which was
the driving force behind landmark legislation enacted in 2003. He
currently serves (by appointment of Chief Judge J.D. Smith of the
Georgia Court of Appeals) on the 11-member Public Defender Standards
Council, charged with the responsibility for delivering indigent
criminal defense services within the state's criminal justice system.
He was also instrumental on the Public Interest Loan Repayment Task
Force that wrote legislation creating a state fund for this cause,
which was passed by the Georgia Legislature in 2002.
In
2001, Kurtz was appointed as a commissioner to represent Georgia on the
National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. He had
previously served as a reporter for NCCUSL and was a member of the
drafting committee of the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act from
1988 to 1992. He also served as a reporter to the NCCUSL drafting
committee on the Status of Children of Assisted Conception from 1987 to
1988.
In addition, he is a member of the American Law
Institute and served as adviser on the ALI Project on Principles of
Family Dissolution in 1998-99.
Active in law school and university affairs, Kurtz has
been elected by colleagues to three terms of service on the University
Council as well as served two terms on the board of the Georgia
Athletic Association. He has been a Senior Foundation Fellow since
1995, acting as a mentor to recipients of UGA's highest undergraduate
scholarship.
Kurtz served as a law clerk to Chief Judge Harry
Phillips of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit upon his
graduation from law school. He then taught at the law schools of Boston
University and Boston College before joining the faculty of the
University of Georgia. During his tenure at UGA, Kurtz has been a
visiting professor at the universities of Texas and Missouri,
Vanderbilt University and Mercer University.
Kurtz earned his bachelor's and law degrees from Vanderbilt University and a Master of Laws from Harvard.
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