By Kristy Demas
U-M?Law
Michigan Law hosted the 11th Annual Lutie A. Lytle Black Women Law Faculty Workshop and Writing Retreat earlier this summer, an event that celebrates one of the first women law professors in the United States.
The seven-day event combines professional development and networking with opportunities for focused writing and peer feedback.
The get-together was conceived by Michigan Law alumna Angela Onwuachi-Willig, ’97, the Chancellor’s Professor of Law at the University of California, Berkeley, and is hosted at a different law school each year.
Michigan Law Professor Laura Beny said this year’s theme, “Being Brilliant, Balanced, and Bold in the New Legal and Political Landscape—Academia and Social Justice,” was especially timely.
“It is representative of Lutie at its core, and meaningful in these legal and political times,”?Beny said. “This conference brings together black women law professors at all career stages for workshops, writing sessions and fellowship in a venue where it’s comfortable to talk openly about our varied experiences in legal academia.”
Planning committee member Dana Thompson welcomed the group to Ann Arbor and was a participant in a workshop panel.
“Lutie offers established African American women legal scholars, clinical professors and aspiring professors the chance to share their scholarship, discuss legal academic issues and honor each other’s accomplishments in a collaborative and supportive environment,” said Thompson, who is a clinical professor of law at Michigan and the founding director of its Entrepreneurship Clinic.
“It’s fitting to host the workshop here this year,” she added, “in light of U-M’s recent commitment to implementing diversity, equity, and inclusion in a five-year plan.”
This was Michigan Law’s first time hosting the conference.
Leslie Culver, professor of legal writing and director of A.I.M. for Law at California Western School of Law, attended the workshop for the first time and said she “still can’t stop raving about it.”
“Without being dramatic, it was really a life changer in terms of my personal career growth,” she said.
Culver said she especially appreciated the works-in-progress forum and specified writing time during the last four days of the workshop.
“The feedback was thoughtful, engaging, and really was the catalyst that turned my current work into something that I never would have imagined without their insight,” she said.
This year’s conference drew nearly 100 participants.
Speakers included Marcilynn Burke, University of Oregon Law Schooln dean; Michele Coleman Mayes, New York Public Library vice president, general counsel and secretary; Robert Sellers, U-M vice provost for equity and inclusion and chief diversity officer; and Kristin N. Johnson, Seton Hall University Law School professor.
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