Joined the faculty in 1995.
Education
J.D., Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, May 1990
B.A., Sociology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, June 1987
Courses Taught
Commercial Law
Juvenile Law
Biographical Information
- Lois Prestage Woods Professor of Law, Texas Southern University, Thurgood Marshall School of Law, Houston, TX (2023-Present)
- Professor, Texas Southern University, Thurgood Marshall School of Law, Houston, TX (2013)
- Associate Professor, Texas Southern University, Thurgood Marshall School of Law, Houston, TX (2010-2013)
- Assistant Professor, Texas Southern University, Thurgood Marshall School of Law, Houston, TX (2006-2010)
- Law School Instructor, Texas Southern University, Thurgood Marshall School of Law (1995-2006)
- Editor-in-Chief, The Earl Carl Institute for Legal and Social Policy, Texas Southern University, Houston, TX
- Tax Attorney, Exxon Company, U.S.A. Tax Department, Houston, TX (1990-1995)
Select Publications
Professor Green’s article, The Law Demands Process for Rehomed Children, 69 Ark. L. Rev. 72 (Fall 2016). It explores the issue of rehoming, a recently developed self-help remedy where adoptive parents advertise “unruly” children on Internet chat rooms in hopes of relinquishing their custody to another.
A Presumptive in Custody Approach to Police Conducted School Interrogations, 40 Am. J. Crim. L. 145 (2013).
Realistic Opportunity for Release Equals Rehabilitation: How the States Must Provide Meaningful Opportunity for Release, 16 BERKELEY J. CRIM. L. 1 (2011).
The Admissibility of Expert Witness Testimony Based on Adolescent Brain Imaging Technology in the Prosecution of Juveniles: How Fairness and Neuroscience Overcome the Evidentiary Obstacles to Allow for Applications of a Modified Common Law Infancy Defense, 12 N. C. J. L. & TECH. 1 (2010).
Protection for Victims of Child Sex Trafficking in the United States: Forging the Gap Between U.S. Immigration Laws & Human Trafficking Laws, 12 U. C. DAVIS J. JUV. L. & POL'Y 309 (2008).
Prosecutorial Waiver into Adult Criminal Court; A Conflict of Interests Violation Amounting To The States Legislative Abrogation of Juveniles' Due Process Rights, 110 PENN ST. L. REV. 233, 266 (2005).
