Larissa Katz
- Pritzker Pucker Family Visiting Professor of Law
J.S.D., Yale Law School, 2012
LL.M., Yale Law School, 2004
LL.B., University of Alberta, 2000
B.A., University of Alberta, 1996
Property Law
Equity and Trusts
Private Law Theory
J.S.D., Yale Law School, 2012
LL.M., Yale Law School, 2004
LL.B., University of Alberta, 2000
B.A., University of Alberta, 1996
Property Law
Equity and Trusts
Private Law Theory
Larissa Katz is Professor of Law and holds the Faculty's Cecil A. Wright Chair at the University of Toronto. She held a Canada Research Chair in Private Law Theory (2014-2024) and served as the Associate Dean (Graduate Programs). She is cross-appointed to the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy. Prior to joining the Faculty of Law in 2013, Professor Katz clerked for the late Justice Charles D. Gonthier at the Supreme Court of Canada, worked in litigation at Sullivan & Cromwell LLP (NYC) and taught at Queen’s University, Faculty of Law.
Professor Katz writes about moral, political and social issues relating to private law generally and property law in particular. Her work appears in journals such as Theoretical Inquiries in Law, Yale Law Journal, University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Legal Theory, Jurisprudence, University of Toronto Law Journal, McGill Law Journal and the Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence, Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy (forthcoming), Notre Dame Law Review (forthcoming). Her work is included in anthologies such as The Philosophical Foundations of Property Law (Oxford University Press), The Philosophical Foundations of Equity, The Cambridge Companion to Law and Philosophy (Cambridge U. Press). Professor Katz is currently writing People and Things: Property in the Legal Order (under contract with Oxford University Press).
Professor Katz has been a visiting fellow at the John Fleming Centre for the Advancement of Legal Research at the Australian National University, a Visiting Professor at Sciences Po (Paris) and an HLA Hart Visiting Fellow at the Oxford Center for Ethics & Philosophy of Law, Oxford University. Professor Katz actively works on issues in law and policy in Canada and the United States. Professor Katz serves as a member of the International Advisory Panel for the American Law Institute’s project on the Restatement of the Law (Fourth), Property.
Professor Katz is an Associate Editor of Law and Philosophy and on the advisory board of Queen’s Law Journal.