Milton Katz (1907-1995) served on the Harvard Law School faculty from 1939 to 1995. He was a Lecturer on Law 1939-1940; Professor of Law 1940-1948; Byrne Professor of Administrative Law 1948-1950; Henry L. Stimson Professor of Law 1955-1978; and an Emeritus professor 1978-1995. He served as Director, International Legal Studies 1954-1978. 

Research: International law, administrative law, constitutional law, torts, civil procedure, campaign finance, elections.  

Education: Harvard College A.B. 1927; Harvard Law School LL.B. 1931. 

Selected Scholarship / Representative Publications: “Cases and Materials on Administrative Law” (first published 1947); “The Law of International Transactions and Relations, Cases and Materials” (1960). 

Noteworthy Appointments: Director of the U.S. Marshall Plan; worked on the New Deal and held appointments on the War Production Board and the Ford Foundation; Special Counsel to the Securities and Exchange Commission; Special Assistant to the U.S. Attorney General; Suffolk University Distinguished Professor of Law 1978-1995.