Skip Navigation

OU Professor Receives Award from United States Department of the Interior

NEWS
In photo, From left to right:   Marlon Duke, Nathan Kuhnert, Drew Kershen, Anna Hoag, James Allard and Collins Balcombe, posing for picture.

OU Professor Receives Award from United States Department of the Interior


By

Jonathan Kyncl

Date

June 6, 2024

Media Contact

Jonathan Kyncl
(405) 325-1855
jkyncl@ou.edu


NORMAN, Okla. — The United States Department of the Interior awarded University of Oklahoma professor Drew Kershen its Citizen’s Award for Exceptional Service. 

Kershen, the Earl Sneed Centennial Professor of Law Emeritus in the OU College of Law, received this award for his “contributions to public service in support of the Upper Washita and Upper Red River Basin Studies for the Bureau of Reclamation.”

“The water law report that I prepared for the Bureau of Reclamation became a capstone project to my career as a water law teacher and practitioner," Kershen said. “I am grateful to the Bureau for giving me the opportunity to participate in its river basin studies on the Upper Red and Washita Rivers of Oklahoma.  I am now humbled that the Bureau considers the report to be worthy of a Citizen’s Award for Exceptional Service.  I am so very proud of the work that the Bureau, its partners, and I accomplished.”

Kershen wrote an academic-level legal evaluation of the water management strategies and the water rights of four Reclamation reservoirs in western Oklahoma – Fort Cobb, Foss, Lugert-Altus and Tom Steed.  In its citation, Reclamation described the legal review “as a legacy body of work that promises to inform water management for decades to come.”  The Kershen legal review can be found here.

“Dr. Drew L. Kershen was selected to conduct a legal review, academic review and report on the history and evolution of the fundamental statues and case law that govern groundwater and stream water in a manner that has affected or could affect Oklahoma Reclamation projects,” the citation states. “For his many significant accomplishments, Dr. Drew L. Kershen is granted the Citizen’s Award for Exceptional Service of the Department of the Interior.”

In November 2023, the Oklahoma Governor’s Water Conference honored Kershen with the Oklahoma Water Pioneer Award for his Reclamation legal review and his thirty plus years of teaching, writing and professional work related to Oklahoma water law and water management.

About the University of Oklahoma

Founded in 1890, the University of Oklahoma is a public research university located in Norman, Oklahoma. As the state’s flagship university, OU serves the educational, cultural, economic and health care needs of the state, region and nation. OU was named the state’s highest-ranking university in U.S. News & World Report’s most recent Best Colleges list. For more information about the university, visit ou.edu.


Recent News

Research
July 08, 2025

Building the Weather Workforce of Tomorrow

Enhanced weather forecasting is crucial for minimizing damage caused by extreme weather and protecting lives. A multi-university initiative led by the University of Oklahoma – the Consortium for Advanced Data Assimilation Research and Education, or CADRE – is addressing this need by training the next generation of data assimilation experts.


Campus & Community
July 07, 2025

University of Oklahoma Celebrates ASPI USA’s Launch of Oklahoma Chair

The Australian Strategic Policy Institute and the Knudsen Institute recently named the Oklahoma Chair for Strategic Policy and International Engagement. The University of Oklahoma, through its Oklahoma Aerospace and Defense Innovation Institute, celebrates this addition to its strategic partnerships, which will help shape global defense strategy. The Oklahoma Chair represents a significant milestone in Oklahoma’s expanding partnerships with U.S. allies and its leadership in defense policy, research and industrial innovation.


Research
July 07, 2025

OU Undergrads Win Access to World-Class Telescopes for Stellar Research

Alex Gleason and Alex Albright, both seniors in the Homer L. Dodge Department of Physics and Astronomy, were awarded time to observe distant stars at the International Gemini Observatory. Their combined time represents approximately 4.5% of all available time allotted to U.S. astronomers from Aug. 2025 through Jan. 2026.