“At the university level, her leadership chairing the Deans Working Group in the wake of the Aug. 11 and 12 tragedy led to important Universitywide changes, and her service to the Karsh Institute of Democracy as vice chair of the board has been invaluable.”
He continued: “I’m heartened that she will continue to bring her considerable talent and expertise to the Law School after stepping down as dean, and that her contributions will continue to benefit the Law School community for generations to come.”
Executive Vice President and Provost Ian Baucom, who served alongside Goluboff as dean of the College of Arts & Sciences before taking on his current role, praised Goluboff for her service.
“I have had the good fortune to work alongside Risa Goluboff as a dean colleague and as provost, and I am deeply grateful,” Baucom said. “Her ability to think critically about complex issues and to translate this to its practical applications is exceptional. Risa has been a remarkable leader for the Law School, and she has strengthened the entire University.”
Baucom and John C. Jeffries Jr., the David and Mary Harrison Distinguished Professor, a former Law School dean and counselor to Ryan, will co-chair the committee that will conduct a national search for Goluboff’s successor. Full details on the committee and search process will be announced soon.
A prominent legal historian who joined the faculty in 2002 and became dean in 2016, Goluboff is the Arnold H. Leon Professor of Law and a professor of history whose scholarship and teaching focuses on American constitutional and civil rights law. She is the author of the award-winning books “Vagrant Nation: Police Power, Constitutional Change, and the Making of the 1960s” and “The Lost Promise of Civil Rights.” Goluboff is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Law Institute, and a 2011 winner of the University’s All-University Teaching Award.
“It has been a true privilege and an immense pleasure to lead this historic institution,” she said. “The extraordinary accomplishments of our students, faculty, staff and alumni, and the robust community we share, are a source of unending pride. I will continue over the coming months to put all of my energies into ensuring that this law school remains at the pinnacle of legal education, and I look forward to returning to the faculty that has sustained me for so long.”
Goluboff made history as the 12th – and first female – dean of UVA Law. Her tenure has been marked by a hiring spree so extraordinary that it caught the attention of legal academics on X, formerly known as Twitter, with 34 new faculty so far. In addition to recruiting star faculty from top schools across the country, Goluboff harnessed the intellectual firepower of longstanding and new professors by establishing 13 new centers to facilitate and promote their scholarship. As a result, the Law School made significant gains on common metrics of scholarly impact.
The school also has captured accolades such as the Princeton Review’s ranking as No. 1 law school for Best Quality of Life every year of Goluboff’s deanship. The Law School is also top-five in Best Career Prospects, Best Classroom Experience, Best Professors and Best for Federal Clerkships.
In 2018, UVA Law graduates Martha and Bruce Karsh made fundraising history at the Law School when they became its first $50 million donors. Their gift created the Karsh-Dillard Scholarships, endowed professorships and established the Karsh Center for Law and Democracy. The Karshes later gave $50 million to UVA for the Karsh Institute of Democracy, for which Goluboff serves as advisory board vice chair.
The Karshes’ gift kicked off the Law School’s portion of the Honor the Future capital campaign. Over the past four years, more than 70% of alumni have given to the campaign, which has raised more than $373 million toward its $400 million goal and is scheduled to conclude in 2025. During Goluboff’s deanship, the school’s endowment has grown 76%, to more than $831 million today.
“Our dedicated and generous alumni have made possible all that we have accomplished over the past seven years,” Goluboff said. “It has been a joy to get to know so many of our graduates and to see the obvious affection they have for this institution.”