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Jack Tuholske

Jack Tuholske

In Memoriam
Professor of Law
Environmental Law Center
U.S.-Asia Partnerships for Environmental Law
Administration
New Economy Law Center

JD, University of Montana, 1985

Curriculum Vitae

Jack Tuholske

Biography

Since graduating from the University of Montana School of Law with honors in 1985, Professor Jack Tuholske practiced public interest environmental litigation in state and federal court in Montana and the West for 35 years.  He had been lead counsel for over 50 published decisions, including over a dozen successful cases at the Montana Supreme Court in the fields of water pollution, land use, biodiversity, constitutional law, citizen suits and natural resource management.  In recognition of his public interest work, he received the William O. Douglas Award, the Sierra Club’s highest award, in 2002 and the Kerry Rydberg Award in 2010 by the University of Oregon Public Interest Environmental Law Conference.

Professor Tuholske's passion for teaching led him into the classroom first at the University of Montana and then at Vermont Law School where he taught from 2003 to 2018.  Jack regarded VLS as an innovative institution and allowed him to create a unique two-week summer backpacking field seminar teaching public land management. In addition, he founded and was the Director of the VLS Water and Justice Program. He was appointed as the Faculty Advisor to the VLS U.S.-Asia Partnerships in Environmental Law and travelled to China fifteen times between 2011 and 2020.  In China Professor Tuholske worked with the Supreme People’s Court, National Judges College, National Procuratorate College, NGOs, attorneys, professors and students throughout China to collaborate in the development of environmental protection laws and practice.  In 2009 he also taught at the Law Faculty of University of Ljubljana in Slovenia as a Fulbright Scholar.

In addition to classroom teaching, he developed and taught the first online law class at VLS in 2011.  Professor Tuholske taught more than 30 online classes for VLS, designed and taught classes in climate crisis law and policy, administrative law and natural resources law.

His combination of courtroom advocacy, scholarship and classroom teaching provided him an "excellent bridge between legal theory and on-the-ground practice for environmental protection".

Publications

​​Tuholske, Jack and Judge Sun Qian, “Explorations of and Reflections on China's System of Environmental Public Interest Litigation,” ​ published in the June edition of the Environmental Law Reporter, 47 ELR 10497.

Articles

​Jack R. Tuholske, Diamonds in the Rough, Litigating State Environmental Constitutional Provisions, Widener Law Review (accepted and being edited for Winter 2015).​​
Jack R. Tuholske, The Montana Supreme Court's Conservative Approach to Interpreting New Fundamental Rights, 72 Mont. L. Rev. 237 (2011).​ ​
​Sarah A. Klahn Esq. and Jack R. Tuholske, A Survey of Western Water Law Regulation of Coalbed Methane Produced Ground Water, 77 The Water Report 1 (July 15, 2010).​ ​
​Jack R. Tuholske, Hot Water, Dry Streams: A Tale of Two Trout, 34 Vt L. Rev. 927 (2010).
Jack R. Tuholske, When Is a Stream a Stream, Natural, and Property Private? 59 The Water Report 10 (Jan.15, 2009).
​Jack R. Tuholske, Groundwater and the Public Trust Doctrine: A Fresh Application of an Age-old Principle, 9 Vt J. Envtl. L. 189 (2008).
​Jack R. Tuholske, The Legislature Shall Make No Law . . . Abridging Montanans' Constitutional Rights to a Clean and Healthful Environment, 15 Southeastern Envtl. L.J.311 (2007).

Commentaries

​Jack R. Tuholske, Michael G. Bader, Creating Resilient Habitats: Native Fish Recovery in a Time of Climate Change, Sierra Club Western Regional Office, (Oct. 2008).​