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Feb. 28, 2006 - Hiram E. Chodosh has been appointed the new dean
of the S.J. Quinney College of Law at the University of Utah.
Chodosh comes to the U from the School of Law at Case Western
Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, where he is the Joseph
C. Hostetler - Baker & Hostetler Professor of Law and serves
as associate dean for academic affairs. “We are extraordinarily
fortunate in hiring Hiram Chodosh. He is an internationally recognized
legal scholar and administrator who brings an exceptional breadth
and depth of experience to the S.J. Quinney College of Law. His
guidance and leadership will be foundational in moving our College
of Law into the elite of public universities in America,”
said University of Utah President Michael K Young.
Professor Chodosh, who will assume the deanship on July 1, 2006,
is “excited and impressed by the U’s outstanding and
collaborative leadership team; the enthusiasm, talent, and ambition
of the faculty, students, and staff; the commitment, entrepreneurship,
and generosity of the community; and a most spectacular setting
for the construction of a new law school building.” Chodosh
will focus on expanding the U’s global programs, developing
professional opportunities for students, integrating the innovative
use of technology, and promoting interdisciplinary research and
training.
A graduate of Wesleyan University (with high honors in history)
and Yale Law School, Chodosh practiced with the international
firm of Cleary, Gottlieb in New York City before joining the faculty
at Case in 1993. Winner of the distinguished teacher award in
2000, he has taught a series of innovative international courses,
including a first-year course in global perspectives and a lab
in comparative judicial reform. Upon learning that Professor Chodosh
would be leaving Case, Dean Gerald Korngold wished his colleague
well. “We at Case Western Reserve will truly miss Hiram
and wish him the very best. Hiram is one of the great innovators
in American legal education, and he is able to bring people together
around exciting ideas. I know he will be a great success as dean
at Utah,” said Korngold.
In his service capacity at Case, Professor Chodosh has helped
to develop seven curricular concentrations, new leadership opportunities
for students, advanced research programs, interdisciplinary courses,
and new skills training and public service learning formats. Chodosh
also developed a broad array of global justice programs and conferences
as director of the Frederick K. Cox International Law Center from
1998 to 2003, and has served on several key strategic university
committees at Case.
An internationally recognized expert in comparative and global
justice reform, Chodosh has hands-on experience in over 20 countries.
He has served as a senior reporter on several State Department
reform studies (since 1993), a consultant on judicial reform for
the International Monetary Fund (since 1999), and an advisor to
the World Bank's Justice Reform Group (since 2005). A Fulbright
Senior Scholar (India, 2003), Chodosh has delivered over 100 public
presentations at home and abroad, including a workshop on constitutional
design and implementation for over 40 Iraqi legal academics in
July 2004. Chodosh is a renowned author of over 30 articles, essays,
book chapters, and 30 special reports. His latest book, Global
Justice Reform: A Comparative Methodology, was published
last year by NYU Press.
Colleagues who have worked with Professor Chodosh over the years
say he has demonstrated the ability needed to succeed as dean
at the S.J. Quinney College of Law. “Hiram Chodosh is a
natural leader in any group of legal professionals and scholars.
A man of uncommon talent, energy, and decency, he is a zephyr
of fresh air blowing in from the east. He will bring out the very
best in his colleagues, students, and community,” said Peter
H. Schuck, Simeon E. Baldwin Professor of Law, Yale Law School.
Guido Calabresi, 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals judge and former
dean of Yale Law School, says the University’s search committee
made a wise choice. “Hiram Chodosh has all the qualities
needed to be a superb dean. He is smart, generous, and has the
vision it takes to lead a great law school. He should be just
wonderful, and I am delighted that the University of Utah has
successfully recruited him,” said Judge Calabresi.
Harold Hongju Koh, Dean and Gerard C. and Bernice Latrobe Smith
Professor of International Law at Yale Law School says Professor
Chodosh is a the right hire at the right time. "Hiram Chodosh
was born to be a great dean. I have known Scott Matheson for three
decades and have trouble imagining who could succeed him. But
in Hiram, Utah has found the perfect law dean for the age of globalization,"
said Koh.
The University of Utah conducted a nationwide search for a new
dean; Professor Chodosh was selected from an exceptionally strong
group of candidates from major law schools across the country.
Sr. Vice President for Academic Affairs David W. Pershing says
Chodosh received wide support during the interview process. “He
was the unanimous choice of the search committee, the University
leadership, and all of the constituent groups including the faculty,
staff and students of the S.J. Quinney Law School, as well as
the legal community,” said Pershing.
Professor Chodosh succeeds Scott M. Matheson, Jr. who is stepping
down at the end of this academic year to pursue other interests
and go back to teaching law full time. “This law school
has been an important part of my life for a very long time, so
I am very pleased that someone of Hiram Chodosh’s many accomplishments
and talents will succeed me and continue to take the law school
forward,” said Matheson.
Matheson has been dean for the past eight years. During his successful
tenure as dean, he helped to accomplish several objectives, including
recruiting 12 tenured faculty members, securing $26 million from
the S.J. and Jessie E. Quinney Foundation, and initiating the
pro bono program. President Young says Dean Matheson will continue
to provide his expertise to the law school. “The University
is fortunate to have benefited from the wise leadership and stellar
scholarship of Scott Matheson. Under his leadership the quality
of both the faculty and the students has grown, as has the financial
base for the College of Law. We are pleased that he will continue
to be a significant contributor to the University as we move forward,”
said President Young.
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