 Robert
F. Kennedy Jr. is credited with leading the fight
to protect New York City's water supply, but his
reputation as a resolute defender of the environment
stems from a litany of successful legal actions. The
list includes winning numerous settlements for
Riverkeeper, prosecuting governments and companies for
polluting the Hudson River and Long Island Sound,
arguing cases to expand citizen access to the
shoreline, and suing treatment plants to force
compliance with the Clean Water Act. Mr. Kennedy acts as Chief Prosecuting
Attorney for Riverkeeper. He also serves as Senior
Attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council and
as President of the
Waterkeeper Alliance. At Pace University School of
Law, he is a Clinical Professor and Supervising
Attorney at the
Environmental Litigation Clinic in White Plains,
New York. Earlier in his career Mr. Kennedy served as
Assistant District Attorney in New York City.
The New York City watershed agreement, which he
negotiated on behalf of environmentalists and the
city's watershed consumers, is regarded as an
international model in stakeholder consensus
negotiations and sustainable development. He helped
lead the fight to turn back the aggressive
anti-environmental legislation during the 104th
Congress.
Mr. Kennedy has worked on environmental issues
across the Americas. He has assisted several indigenous
tribes in Latin America and Canada in successfully
negotiating treaties protecting traditional homelands.
Mr. Kennedy has published several books, including
The
Riverkeepers (1997) with John Cronin. His
articles have appeared in the New York Times, Atlantic
Monthly, The Wall Street Journal, Esquire, The Village
Voice, The Boston Globe, The Washington Post, Pace
Environmental Law Review, and other publications.
Mr. Kennedy is a graduate of Harvard University. He
studied at the London School of Economics and received
his law degree from the University of Virginia Law
School. He also received a Masters Degree in
Environmental Law from Pace University.
He is a licensed master falconer, and as often as
possible he pursues a life-long enthusiasm for
white-water paddling. He has organized and led several
expeditions to Latin America, including first descents
on three little known rivers in Peru, Columbia, and
Venezuela. 2 |
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