Kyle Duncan teaches courses on Comparative Law, Admiralty, Constitutional Law, and European Union Law. He has also taught an introductory course on American law to LL.M. students at New York University Law School and Columbia Law School.
Professor Duncan joined the faculty in 2004 after serving two years as an Associate-in-law at Columbia Law School in New York City. From 1999 to 2002, he was an Assistant Solicitor General in the office of the Texas Attorney General. While there, he briefed and argued numerous appeals in state and federal courts, covering a wide range of civil, criminal, and constitutional issues. He also practiced civil appellate law with the law firms of Vinson & Elkins in Houston, Texas, and Weil, Gotshal & Manges in Austin, Texas. From 1997 to 1998, he served as a law clerk to Judge John M. Duhè, Jr., on the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. While at the Louisiana State University Law School, he was Order of the Coif, an Alvin Rubin Scholar, and Executive Senior Editor of the Louisiana Law Review.
Professor Duncan’s primary areas of scholarship are comparative law, legal history, and church-state relationships.
LL.M., Columbia University School of Law
J.D., Louisiana State University
B.A., Summa cum laude, Louisiana State University