On the latest episode of the Quaker Matters Podcast, hosted by Piper Roskovensky ’26, Josh Galperin ’00 discusses what it’s like to work in environmental law, what he enjoys most about teaching law, and shares advice to students who are interested in pursuing a career in law.
“When I started college and had to write papers, I realized I could do it, and do it well, and do it without a lot of stress. I watched my friends agonizing over an assignment, and it was obvious to me that all the time we’d spent writing, critiquing, and editing at WFS set me off on the right foot. And as a law professor, a huge portion of my job is writing. I probably gravitated to this because it was something I was confident I could do well.”
Josh graduated from the University of Delaware in 2004, majoring in Political Science and minoring in Wildlife Conservation. Following his graduation from Delaware–and sensing a need for more people to work at the intersection of science and policy– Josh enrolled at Vermont Law and Graduate School to earn his JD and the Yale School of Environment to pursue his Master’s in Environmental Management. He completed both, earning his JD in 2007 and receiving his Master’s degree in 2008.
Throughout his professional career, Josh has served in various roles, teaching and working in environmental law. He was a Policy Analyst and Research Attorney for the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, the Clinical Director and Lecturer at Yale Law School, the Environmental Law and Policy Program Director of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, and a Visiting Associate Professor of Law at the University of Pittsburgh Law School. Currently, Josh is an Assistant Professor of Law at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University and a Visiting Professor of Law at Yale Law School.
“I always mention Wilmington Friends as having an incredible influence in my life as preparation not only for college but well beyond. Acceptance and curiosity in understanding sound simple enough, but as I get older, I realize the world would benefit greatly if more people were taught those lessons at a young age.”
“There’s no need to be modest about your ambitions or your hopes. If there is something that you want to do or something that you want to see happen in the world, move toward it one little step at a time, and you can be a part of how things change.”
On the latest episode of the Quaker Matters Podcast, hosted by Piper Roskovensky ’26, Josh Galperin ’00 discusses what it’s like to work in environmental law, what he enjoys most about teaching law, and shares advice to students who are interested in pursuing a career in law.
When Kaylea Ann Donaghy, age 3, walked into Wilmington Friends Lower School in January, 2021, she was not aware that she may well be the ninth generation and 38th member of her family to attend or be involved with the oldest school in Delaware.
Voices of Friends: Enterprise Chief Scientific Officer and Vice President of Research Administration and Scientific Affairs for ChristianaCare, Dr. Omar Khan ’90.
Statement of Nondiscrimination as to Student Enrollment
Wilmington Friends School admits students of any race, color, gender, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students of these schools. Wilmington Friends School does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, gender, national and ethnic origin in administration of their educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school administered programs.