Biography
Saylor Soinski is the Animal Law Teaching Fellow for the Center for Animal Law Studies. She supports the Animal Law Program, with a primary focus on contributing to the success of the online courses in the Animal Law LLM and Animal Law MSL degree programs.
Saylor is a California attorney and a 2023 Yale Law School alum. She received her BA in Anthropology from the University of Chicago, where she studied human-animal interaction and conducted an ethnographic study of the Sacramento Sheriff’s Wild Horse Inmate Program. At Yale, Saylor was a Notes & Comments Editor on the Yale Law Journal, Co-President of the Yale Animal Law Society, a Coker Fellow in Constitutional Law, and an Emerging Scholars Fellow for the Brooks Institute for Animal Rights Law & Policy.
She has published scholarship on topics including the role of scale in human-animal encounters, how the cultural value of animal slaughter may be a barrier to the success of cell-cultured meat, and the possible use of NAGPRA (The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act) to shift management authority over the Yellowstone bison.
Prior to joining CALS, Saylor was a judicial law clerk for the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit.
Center for Animal Law Studies is located in Wood Hall on the Law Campus.
MSC: 51
email cals@lclark.edu
voice 503-768-6960
Center for Animal Law Studies
Lewis & Clark Law School
10101 S. Terwilliger Boulevard MSC 51
Portland OR 97219