Portrait of Dr. Christopher Ralph Brown

Dr. Christopher Ralph Brown

  • Associate Professor at Political Science, College of Liberal Arts

Biography

Christopher R. Brown serves as Associate Professor in the Political Science Department at Texas State University, where he focuses on legal studies and public administration. He completed his undergraduate studies in History and Biology Phi Beta Kappa at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. As a graduate student he was awarded a fellowship to study German constitutional history at the Free University of Berlin. He completed graduate work in law and public administration at the University of Texas at Austin. Before arriving at Texas State University he served as a judicial clerk to the Texas Court of Appeals for the Eighth Judicial District, the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas, litigated on behalf of the Texas Attorney General’s Office in federal and state courts, served as an air and water quality attorney for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, instructed third-year law students in Tulane Law School’s environmental law clinic, and worked on surface water environmental flow issues for the National Wildlife Federation.

Research Interests

See Professional Interests.

Research and Scholarly Interests:

Teaching Interests

Created and received approval for public law course in the MPA program entitled Texas Water Law and Policy, which has been offered since 2018 and attracts Public Administration students, Sustainability students, and students affiliated with the Meadows Center. This course provides an in-depth treatment of Texas surface and groundwater law; statewide water planning under the Texas Water Development Board's State Water Plan; statewide groundwater regulation as it exists in tension with takings law; state strategies to indrease the water supply and to decrease per capita consumption through strategies such as conservation, desalination, direct and indirect reuse; reservoir construction. The course addresses the pervasive and critical problems for state water policy posed by climate change, which casts into doubt the state's ability to calculate surface and groundwater availability, supply through saltwater intrusion, promises to harm groundwater, threatens to harm surface water availability through evaporation, and creates a megadrought of prolonged duration that decreases the available water from all sources.

Created and received approval for an MPA public law course entitled Environmental Litigation, which was offered for the first time in Fall 2025. It provides students a rigorous survey of the public trust doctrine, public nuisance, the Clean Water Act, and the Clean Air Act, and environmental policy issues arising in all these areas.

Created and seeking approval for a new course in local government law designed for public administration students who plan to pursue a career in city management. The course will address topics including but not limited to federal constitutional liability for civil rights violations under 42 U.S.C. section 1983, municipal tort liability under the Texas Tort Claims Act, the attributes of different local government configurations such as a general law city, home rule city, county government,and special purpose district under the Texas Local Government Code, local government duties under the Open Meetings Act and Public Information Act, and competitive bidding requirements under the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code.

Teaches public law course on federal and Texas levels. This course focuses in part on the constitutional basis for legislative-executive cooperation to carry out the police powers doctrine under Article I, section 8 of the Constitution: government's duty to further the health, safety, and welfare of citizens. The course also emphasizes statutory construction and the manner in which police power-based legislation transfers responsibilities to agencies, the statutory principles that govern the function of agencies, the principles of judicial review over agency decision making, and the overriding concern for due process in agency functions.


Teaches course on advanced civil litigation based on the Texas rules of civil procedure and evidence. Advanced Litigation assumes a jury trial under Texas law, and emphasizes the kind of work a paralegal assistant would likely do in such a context. Focuses primarily on Texas pretrial civil procedure and the rules of evidence: elements required for a valid petition, original answerm affirmative defenses, defenses, pleas to the jurisdiction, special exceptions, answers, written discovery,electronic discovery, the rules of evidence, depositions, motions for summary judgment, and pretrial conferences. Covers jury selection, opening argument, putting on the case in chief, motion for directed verdict, making and preserving objections, closing argument, the verdict, and posttrial motions.

Teaches legal drafting.This course offers an intensive review of grammar and style in the legal context, the differing writing styles associated with different phases of litigation, and legal citation form. Emphasizes intense editing and revision to eliminate bad writing habits and ​create good ones.

Has taught three different versions of the social legislation course: federal employment discrimination statutes, federal environmental justice laws, and the federal Voting Rights Act. These courses each provided an in-depth analysis of the statute at issue, the types of claims plaintiffs can pursue under each statute, and an analysis of the impact each form of litigation likely has,.