Steven Koh

Steve Koh

Associate Professor of Law

R. Gordon Butler Scholar in International Law

AB, Harvard College
MPhil, University of Cambridge, England
JD, Cornell Law School


Biography

Steven Arrigg Koh teaches and writes in the areas of criminal law, constitutional law, and international law. His interdisciplinary scholarship bridges theory and practice, drawing on sociological theories to deepen institutionally grounded analyses of U.S. federal and international legal systems.  His research has appeared or is forthcoming in journals such as New York University Law Review, Duke Law Journal Online, Cornell Law Review, Washington University Law Review, Boston University Law Review, Minnesota Law Review, and Fordham Law Review, and was selected for the Michigan Law School Junior Scholars Conference.  He is a contributor to Just Security and Lawfare law blogs and is a fellow at the Center for Cultural Sociology at Yale University.  He joins the Boston University School of Law faculty after serving as the Marianne D. Short and Ray Skowyra Sesquicentennial Assistant Professor of Law at Boston College Law School, where he was a winner of the Innovation in Pedagogy Award. Previously, he completed a fellowship at Columbia Law School.

Professor Koh’s scholarship is informed by a unique combination of high-level legal practice at both US federal criminal and international criminal legal institutions. As a Trial Attorney in the Criminal Division of the US Department of Justice (DOJ) in Washington, DC, he advised US federal and state prosecutors on international, criminal, and constitutional legal issues arising in US criminal cases with transnational dimensions. At DOJ, he also served as Counsel to the Deputy Assistant Attorney General and Counselor for International Affairs, the top international law adviser to Attorney General Loretta Lynch. During this time, Koh also taught International and Transnational Criminal Law as an Adjunct Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center.

His international legal experience spans multiple continents, highlighted by positions in two prominent international criminal courts in The Hague, Netherlands. First, as a Visiting Professional at the International Criminal Court (ICC), he advised the Legal Adviser to the ICC Presidency on matters including the enforcement of sentence agreements with States party to the Rome Statute of the ICC. Second, as an Associate Legal Officer at the U.N. International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, he served in Chambers on the Prosecutor v. Radovan Karadžić trial, one of the capstone cases in the Tribunal’s history regarding charges of war crimes, genocide, and crimes against humanity. Additional international experiences include service as Visiting Scholar at Seoul National University, South Korea; study at the Cornell Summer Institute in International & Comparative Law at Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne in Paris, France; representation of the Robert F. Kennedy Center of Human Rights before the OAS Inter-American Commission on Human Rights; and human rights research on a mission to Colombia co-sponsored by Senator Edward M. Kennedy. He has also been Senior Fellow and Interim-Attorney Editor at the American Society of International Law in Washington, DC and a law clerk for the Honorable Carolyn Dineen King of the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.

Professor Koh earned his JD from Cornell Law School, where he served as Senior Article Editor of the Cornell Law Review. In 2019, Cornell awarded him the Law School Alumni Exemplary Public Service Award for “commitment to the highest standards of public service.” He earned an AB degree cum laude from Harvard College and an MPhil degree in Social and Developmental Psychology from the University of Cambridge, England; he has also completed coursework in Songwriting at Berklee College of Music. He speaks conversational Spanish; has studied French, Arabic, and Korean; and is currently a member of the bar in New York, Massachusetts, and Washington, DC.

Publications

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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, Teaching "Is This Case Rightly Decided?" 108 Minnesota Law Review Headnotes (2024)
    Scholarly Commons
  • Steven Arrigg Koh, Criminal Law's Hidden Consensus 101 Washington University Law Review (2024)
    Scholarly Commons
  • Steven Arrigg Koh, Policing & The Problem of Physical Restraint 64 Boston College Law Review (2023)
    Scholarly Commons
  • Steven Arrigg Koh, Prosecution and Polarization 50 Fordham Urban Law Journal (2023)
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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, How Do Prosecutors "Send a Message"? 57 U.C. Davis Law Review (2023)
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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, Introductory Note to Prosecutor v. Ratko Mladić (U.N. Int’l Residual Mechanism Crim. Tribunals App. Chamber) 61 International Legal Materials (2022)
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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, “Cancel Culture” and Criminal Justice 74 Hastings Law Journal (2022)
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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, The Criminalization of Foreign Relations 90 Fordham Law Review (2021)
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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, Othering Across Borders 70 Duke Law Journal Online (2021)
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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, Core Criminal Procedure 105 Minnesota Law Review (2020)
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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, Foreign Affairs Prosecutions 94 New York University Law Review (2019)
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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, Marbury Moments 54 Columbia Journal of Transnational Law (2015)
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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, Introductory Note to Prosecutor v. Germain Katanga: Judgment on the Appeal against the Decision of Trial Chamber II of 21 November 2012 (Int'l Crim. Ct.) 52 International Legal Materials (2013)
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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, Geography and Justice: Why Prison Location Matters in U.S. and International Theories of Criminal Punishment 47 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law (2013)
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  • Hirad Abtahi & Steven Arrigg Koh, The Emerging Enforcement Practice of the International Criminal Court 45 Cornell International Law Journal (2012)
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  • Steven Arrigg Koh, From Stigma and Coping to Social Repositioning: A New Perspective on HIV/AIDS, Identity and Human Rights, in Symbolic Transformation: The Mind in Movement Through Culture and Society (Brady Wagoner,2010)
    Scholarly Commons
  • Sital Kalantry, Jocelyn E. Getgen & Steven Arrigg Koh, Enhancing Enforcement of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Using Indicators: A Focus on the Right to Education in the ICESCR 32 Human Rights Quarterly (2010)
    Scholarly Commons
  • Steven Arrigg Koh, "Respectful Consideration" after Sanchez-Llamas V. Oregon: Why the Supreme Court Owes More to the International Court of Justice 93 Cornell Law Review (2007)
    Scholarly Commons

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Courses

Federal Criminal Law: LAW JD 847

3 credits

This course examines federal criminal law as a distinct legal system shaped by the dynamic interplay between Congress, the executive branch, and the judiciary. Students will explore the Constitutional foundations of federal jurisdiction, the statutory framework of key offenses—including corruption, racketeering, and criminal violations of Constitutional rights—and the evolving role of federal agencies in enforcement. The course not only covers established doctrine but also highlights the unsettled questions that challenge courts, prosecutors, and policymakers. By analyzing case law, statutory materials, and institutional responses, students will gain insight into how each branch of government influences the development and enforcement of federal criminal law. This course will have a required final exam. PREREQUISITES: Criminal Law, Constitutional Law.

FALL 2025: LAW JD 847 A1 , Sep 2nd to Dec 19th 2025
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Mon,Wed 10:45 am 12:10 pm 3 Steven Arrigg Koh

Theories of Law and Society: LAW JD 909

3 credits

This interdisciplinary seminar introduces students to theories of law and society. Specifically, this seminar considers the nature and function of law through the lens of sociological theory. It addresses many questions overlooked in the traditional law school curriculum. What is law? What is justice? What is the relationship between law and culture? Theorists include classic sociological thinkers such as Durkheim, Weber, Marx, as well as critical thinkers such as de Beauvoir, Said, and Fanon. In their final paper, students will be expected to apply one or more theories to an emerging area of legal doctrine or practice. UPPER-CLASS WRITING REQUIREMENT: This class may be used to satisfy the requirement. ** A student who fails to attend the initial meeting of a seminar, or to obtain permission to be absent from either the instructor or the Registrar, may be administratively dropped from the seminar. Students who are on a wait list for a seminar are required to attend the first seminar meeting to be considered for enrollment.

SPRG 2026: LAW JD 909 A1 , Jan 12th to May 8th 2026
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Wed 2:10 pm 4:10 pm 3 Steven Arrigg Koh