Christa Davis Acampora joined the University of Virginia on Sept. 1 as the new dean of the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences.
Acampora, a Virginia native, comes to UVA from Emory University in Atlanta, where she served as deputy provost and professor of philosophy. Prior to Emory, she was a full professor at Hunter College and the City University of New York’s Graduate Center and served as Hunter’s associate provost for faculty affairs and research.
At Emory, Acampora managed a wide slate of strategic and budgetary priorities related to the university’s academic mission, overseeing academic program development, faculty recruitment and retention, and initiatives in support of undergraduate flourishing – including student innovation and career advising. Acampora is also an acclaimed philosopher and expert in modern European philosophy, moral psychology and aesthetics.
We recently spoke with the new dean to learn more about her background, her passion for liberal arts education and how she’s settling into her new role.
Q. What drew you to UVA?
A. UVA has the extraordinary excellence of a major research university that was born from a powerful idea – educating the public to participate in a democratic experiment of world-historic significance. The opportunity to lead from its core in Arts & Sciences was simply irresistible, and so was the idea of being part of a highly distinguished public university. I spent the first 20 years of my academic career in public research institutions, and this mission greatly appeals to me.
I’m also thrilled to be part of the vital role that Arts & Sciences has in making UVA a great and good university. I care deeply about the transformative power of a liberal arts and sciences education, which I think matters more now than ever. For us to provide a second-to-none education for our students and knowledge to help us solve some of the world’s intractable problems for the benefit of the Commonwealth of Virginia, the nation, and the world, our teaching, research and service missions must be strategically aligned. I see that as a core responsibility for the dean.
Q. You’re from the commonwealth, born in Roanoke and raised in Dublin, Virginia. How did growing up in Virginia shape you and your decision to pursue a career in higher education? And what are you most looking forward to as you move back to your home state?
A. My family tree on my mother’s side traces back centuries in Virginia, before the American Revolution. However, I’m the first in the family line to go to college. At the time, being a first-generation college student wasn’t something I thought about a lot. Looking back, I know it shaped my life significantly.
I received an extraordinary liberal arts education at Hollins University that put me on the path to higher education. While there, I fell in love with research and received my first federal grant to examine the passage of the Virginia Bill for Religious Freedom, the key ideas that were the basis of the First Amendment.
Good advising experiences led me to discover a passion I didn’t even know I had at the time – philosophy. I was fascinated by the power of logic and argumentation and by thinking about big ideas – as well as learning new ways of thinking and exploration. Now, as an academic leader, I love to see how all the elements of discovery fit together.
Coming home to Virginia, I’m looking forward to bringing together my experiences growing up in the area with the knowledge and perspective I have now as a long-serving faculty member and senior university leader to address key issues. What do our students need in the future? How can UVA enhance their opportunities and help the commonwealth and our larger nation and world become both great and good? As people, we face some enormous challenges and opportunities, and I believe our faculty, staff and students at UVA, together with our alumni, have the knowledge and know-how to help us understand and meet them.

