Chris Mirasola
Climenko Fellow and Lecturer on Law
2023-2024
Chris Mirasola is Climenko Fellow and lecturer on law. His scholarship primarily concerns national security and international law, and particularly examines invocations of sovereignty to justify claims of executive power. Further, Chris also assesses similar assertions of authority in the national security and international law practice of the People’s Republic of China. For that work, Chris relies on his Chinese language skills and time spent working in the PRC to engage with government documents, Chinese language scholarship, and related materials.
Chris’s work has appeared or is forthcoming in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Southern California Law Review, Harvard National Security Journal, and Harvard Negotiation Law Review, among other publications. He has also written on national security law, international law, and PRC law for Lawfare. As attorney-advisor at DoD from 2019 through 2022, Chris’s portfolio included military deployments within the United States, DoD humanitarian and security assistance programs abroad, international agreements in the Western Hemisphere, DoD’s myriad activities responding to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. For this work, Chris was awarded the Secretary of Defense Meritorious Civilian Service Award. Prior to graduate school, Chris worked in China, where he designed online teaching modules for criminal defense attorneys and taught English.
Chris graduated with a BA with Honors in International Studies from The Johns Hopkins University, an MPP from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, and a JD, cum laude, from Harvard Law School.
Education
- J.D. Harvard Law School, 2018
- M.P.P. Harvard Kennedy School of Government, 2018
- B.A. International Studies Johns Hopkins University, 2012
Representative Publications
- Christopher Mirasola, The Role of Secretariats in International Negotiations: The Case of Climate Change, 24 Harv. Negot. L. Rev 213 (Spring 2019).
- Christopher Mirasola, Domestic Law Creating International Regimes: How Legal Formalism Is Hobbling U.S. Foreign Policy, 26 Univ. of Miami Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 1 (2018).
- Christopher Mirasola, Historic Waters and Ancient Title: Outdated Doctrines for Establishing Maritime Sovereignty and Jurisdiction, 47 J. Mar. L. & Com. 29 (2016).