Megan Corrarino
Managing Editor
Megan Corrarino (@MeganCorrarino) is Managing Editor of Just Security and Research Scholar at New York University School of Law. She was previously an associate at Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, where her practice focused on complex commercial litigation, international dispute resolution, and human rights; and a Robert L. Bernstein International Human Rights Fellow at Human Rights First. She also served as a law clerk to Judge Susan P. Graber of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
Corrarino holds a BA from the University of Chicago, an MPA from Princeton’s School of Public and International Affairs, and a JD from Yale Law School. Before becoming a lawyer, Corrarino worked on economic justice in the Americas, including as a Fulbright grantee to Brazil. She has also served as an international law consultant to social movement groups, with a particular focus on labor issues.
Corrarino also writes fiction and creative non-fiction. Her work has appeared in literary journals, short form film, and academic and practitioners’ publications, and has been supported by residencies from the Banff Centre for Arts + Creativity, the Santa Fe Art Institute, and others. Corrarino is also on LinkedIn.
Articles by this author:
The Just Security Podcast: A Landmark Court Opinion on the Ocean and Climate Change
by Ambassador Cheryl Bazard, Catherine Amirfar, Megan Corrarino and Paras Shah
May 28th, 2024
Welcoming Rebecca Ingber and Scott Roehm to Just Security’s Board of Editors
by Tess Bridgeman, Ryan Goodman and Megan Corrarino
Sep 27th, 2023
Book Release: Race & National Security, Professor Matiangai Sirleaf ed.
by Tess Bridgeman, Ryan Goodman and Megan Corrarino
Sep 22nd, 2023
2023 Forward: Democracy, Russia-Ukraine War, Tech Policy, Climate Change
by Megan Corrarino, Tess Bridgeman and Ryan Goodman
Dec 26th, 2022
The Good Governance Papers: A “Report Card” Wrap-Up of 2022 Updates
by Emily Berman, Tess Bridgeman, Megan Corrarino, Ryan Goodman and Dakota S. Rudesill
Mar 1st, 2022
Introduction to Just Security’s Series on Executive Order 9066, 80 Years After Signing
Feb 18th, 2022