Michelle Kuo
- Department(s) : History and Politics
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Biography
Michelle Kuo joined the American University of Paris in 2015 and teaches in its History, Law, and Society program on issues related to race, punishment, immigration, and the law.
Michelle is the author of Reading with Patrick, a mix of memoir, history, and law and exploration of racial and economic inequality in the Arkansas and Mississippi Delta. It has been the runner-up for the Dayton Literary Peace Prize and shortlisted for the Reading Women Nonfiction Prize and the Goddard Riverside Stephan Russo Book Prize for Social Justice, and praised in publications such as The Atlantic, The New Yorker, Christian Science Monitor, and Times Literary Supplement. Reading with Patrick has been selected for community reads programs that include the University of Iowa, the Yale Prison Education Initiative, and Washtenaw Reads. As James Wood writes in The New Yorker, “Anyone interested in questions of pedagogy, racism, and incarceration in America, not to mention literary criticism, will be enthralled by this book ... It is hard to read this challenging book ... and not think, You must change your life."
Michelle attended public schools in Kalamazoo, Michigan. After graduating with a degree in Social Studies and Gender Studies at Harvard College, she joined Teach for America and moved to the rural town of Helena, Arkansas, located in the heart of the Mississippi Delta. Michelle taught English at an alternative school for kids who were expelled from other schools.
At Harvard Law School, Michelle worked as a student attorney at the Criminal Justice Institute, a domestic violence and family mediation clinic, and the Education Law Clinic/Trauma Policy Learning Initiative. A Paul and Daisy Soros Fellow, Michelle received the National Clinical Association's award for her advocacy of children with special needs.
Michelle worked as an immigrants' rights lawyer at Centro Legal de la Raza, located in the Fruitvale district of Oakland, California. She advocated for tenants facing evictions, workers stiffed out of their wages, and families facing deportation. Supported by a Skadden Fellowship, Michelle's clients included day laborers, restaurant workers, gardeners, nannies, and home care workers. More recently, she has volunteered at a detention center in south Texas at RAICES, helping asylum seekers prepare for interviews with asylum officers.
A passionate advocate of prison education, Michelle has taught courses at San Quentin through the Prison University Project, the only college-degree granting program at a state prison in California, and Oakdale Prison, as part of the Liberal Arts Beyond Bars program at the University of Iowa.
Michelle has also clerked for the Honorable John T. Noonan at the Court of Appeals of the Ninth Circuit. Among the troubling cases that she worked on was U.S. v. Preston, in which the police coerced a confession from an 18 year old with severe disabilities who lived on a Native American reservation.
Michelle has written for publications including The New York Times, LA Review of Books, Lithub, The Point, and Public Books.
At the American University of Paris, Michelle works closely with students on issues relating to diversity, social justice, and nonfiction writing. She won the 2016 Board of Trustees Award for Distinguished Teaching.
SELECT FELLOWSHIPS AND HONORS
2019 Winner of Ann Arbor District Library’s Washtenaw Reads, community initiative to promote reading and civic dialogue.
2018 Dayton Literary Peace Prize, runner-up in Nonfiction Writing.
2018 “Most Supportive Professor,” given by Student Government Association of the American University of Paris to a faculty member.
2018 Community reads program, Yale Prison Education Initiative. Chosen as a common reading at a college prison education program at Yale.
2018 One Community, One Book, University of Iowa Center of Human Rights. Chosen as common reading in the Liberal Arts Beyond Bars program, which brings together college students and incarcerated students in a liberal arts course at the Oakdale Prison.
2017 Shortlisted for the Goddard Riverside Stephan Russo Book Prize for Social Justice.
2017 Shortlisted for the Reading Women Nonfiction Book Prize.
2016 Board of Trustees Distinguished Teaching Award. Given to one faculty member at American University of Paris in recognition of excellence in teaching.
2009 Skadden Fellowshp. Awarded nationally to 28 law school graduates or clerks to support a two-year fellowship in direct legal services for low-income clients.
2009 Derek Bok Center Teaching Award for excellence at Harvard College.
2008 Outstanding Clinical Student. Awarded nationally by the Clinical Legal Education Association for outstanding work in a clinical program at Harvard Law School.
2008 Paul and Daisy Soros Fellow for New Americans. Awarded nationally to 30 graduate students distinguished in leadership and creativity.
2005 Susan Lehmann Teaching Award, Finalist in Mississippi Delta.
2003 Harvard-Knox Fellowship. Awarded for post-graduate study at the University of Cambridge.
2002 Harry S. Truman Scholar. Awarded nationally for leadership, public service, and academic achievement.
2002 Mills Taylor Prize, best essay in Social Studies at Harvard College; Jane C. Grant Prize, best essay in Gender Studies.