Education

B.A., University of Oklahoma

J.D., with distinction, University of Oklahoma

LL.M., with merit, University of London

About

Matt Kane joined OU Law in 2012 and teaches courses on criminal law, international criminal law, comparative law, comparative approaches to counterterrorism and torts. He also maintains an active caseload, focusing on complex civil litigation and criminal defense.  

Matt has been admitted to practice in Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado, the District of Columbia, and the Cherokee Nation, as well all Oklahoma federal districts, the Tenth Circuit, D.C. Circuit of Appeals and the United States Supreme Court. In a first for an Oklahoma attorney (and one of only approximately 100 in the United States), Professor Kane was appointed to the List of Counsel for the International Criminal Court, permitting him to represent victims and defendants at the world’s only permanent international criminal tribunal.

Among other honors and achievements, he received the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children's Award of Merit for his pro bono representation relating to international child abduction litigation, the Oklahoma Bar Association’s Maurice Merrill Golden Quill Award for the most outstanding article published in the Oklahoma Bar Journal and the Journal Record Leadership in Law Award, recognizing community leadership, significant volunteerism and accomplishment in the legal field. He has also been named to Marquis Who’s Who in America and Super Lawyers, and is a Martindale-Hubbell AV-Preeminent rated attorney.

Professor Kane’s scholarship centers on the nexus of criminal and international law. His co-edited book In the Shadow of Genocide: Justice and Memory within Rwanda was published by Routledge in 2023.

Additional Information

In the Shadow of Genocide: Justice and Memory within Rwanda
2023
Routledge

Traditionally Indeterminate Terms at the International Criminal Court
Winter-Spring 2022
42 Johns Hopkins SAIS Review of International Affairs, no. 1, 119-132

The Ubiquitous Ubiquity of Native American Law
April 2018
65 The Federal Lawyer, no. 3, 5, 14

Negligence Purpose, Elements, and Evidence: The Role of Foreseeability in the Law of Each State
2018
Contributing Author
V.L. MacDougall et al. (eds.)

Naming Names: The Prudence, Propriety and Potential Ramifications of Employing ‘Terrorist’ Nomenclature for Pro-Russian Militants in Eastern Ukraine
2017
in The Case of Crimea’s Annexation Under International Law
W. Czaplinski et al. (eds.)

Murder, Torture, Surveillance and Censorship: The Recent Nexus of Federal Jurisprudence and International Criminal Law in Alien Tort Statute Litigation
April 2016
63 The Federal Lawyer, no. 5, 34-39, 51

The Pride of the Common Law: Oklahoma’s Struggle with the Prima Facie Tort Action
Autumn 2016
with Ivan London
52 Tulsa Law Review 41-55

Accessible Judgments as a Practical Means to Reengage African Interest and Salvage the International Criminal Court
2015
African Journal of International Criminal Justice

Atrocity Crimes and International Criminal Tribunals - Challenges, Opportunities and Future Developments
2014
Inside the Minds: Understanding International Criminal Law

The Extraordinary Chambers of the Cambodian Courts: Addressing the Mass Atrocities of the Khmer Rouge
Summer 2014
43 ABA International Law News, no. 3, 16-18

‘A Contradiction in Terms’: Crimes of Contempt at the International Criminal Court and the Case Against Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo’s Legal Representatives
2013-2014
Eyes on the ICC

The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights: A Last Resort for Wrongfully Detained or Deported Immigrants and Asylum Seekers in Africa
Sept. 2013
with Susan Kane
Forced Migration Review, v. 44

Seeking Redress for Violations of the Rights of Human Rights Lawyers before the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights
April 2013
Newsletter of the Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders, 8th Ed.,10-14

The Indefinite Detention of Thomas Kwoyelo
Feb. 2013
JURIST - Forum