Saylor Soinski

Animal Law Teaching Fellow

Wood Hall Room 233

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.