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Thursday, June 1, 2023
New book by Gould alum Lisa Kloppenberg celebrates life of Judge and former Dean Dorothy W. Nelson
By Leslie Ridgeway
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Judge Dorothy Nelson (LLM 1956) |
Moderated by Professor Camille Gear Rich, the conversation with Kloppenberg and Nelson – senior judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, who served as USC Gould faculty from 1957-1980 – touched on Nelson’s milestones and achievements: the first female dean of a major U.S. law school; her work in legal education; and the power of food to connect people.
The moderator and speakers were introduced by law students Kiara Jackson, outreach chair of the Womxn of Color Collective and Kathleen Moore and Rachel Stone, co-presidents of the Women’s Law Association.
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Lisa Kloppenberg (JD 1987) |
“We would go home and stay up all night long,” she said to audience laughter. “We knew every footnote of every case and always did very well in that class.”
The encouragement of legal legend Roscoe Pound, her professor at the time, kept her in law school after disappointing first-year grades. When he pointed out that her answers dutifully quoted the appropriate legal scholars but failed to answer the questions, the experience later led her to institute practice exams for first-year law students when she became dean, giving law students a jump start on their legal education.
Kloppenberg emphasized the importance of the relationship with Pound and the value of mentorship, exhorting students to make the effort to find mentors to guide their progress.
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Professor Camille Gear Rich |
Kloppenberg is a professor and former dean of the Santa Clara School of Law, and she previously served as Santa Clara University’s provost and acting president.
Throughout her time at USC, Nelson was an advocate for equality, inspired by her Baha’i faith, she noted. Nelson was a campus leader on affirmative action and outreach efforts. In addition, while Nelson served as dean, the Western Center on Law and Poverty – then housed at the Gould School – sued L.A. Police Chief Ed Davis for discrimination against minorities, raising the ire of the USC’s board of trustees. Nelson credited University President James Topping with backing up her actions to support diversity and equity on campus.
Rich noted Nelson’s creative risks to champion affirmative action, and the lessons they leave behind for today’s diversity, equity and inclusion advocates.
“You were bold back then in an environment that really maybe wasn’t as conducive to achieving what you wanted to achieve, and we will have to be bold in the future as well,” said Rich, who holds the Dorothy W. Nelson Professor of Law and Sociology.
When asked by a woman law student for career advice, Nelson advised identifying one’s passion, finding others who share the same values and goals and working together to fight for justice and change.
“You have to ask yourself who am I, what do I really believe in, what do I really want to end up doing in my life – and then don’t be afraid to pursue it,” Nelson said.
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