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| Current
News | News Archive
2002-2003 |
Mercer Law School Names New Dean
Daisy
Hurst Floyd has been named dean of the Walter F. George School of
Law. She will join the Law School on July 1. Michael D. Sabbath,
the Walter Homer Drake Professor of Bankruptcy Law, who has served
as interim dean of the Law School since the fall of 2002, will resume
his faculty responsibilities.
"Daisy Hurst Floyd brings a commitment to preparing law graduates
of the highest caliber," said President Godsey. "Her professional
accomplishments demonstrate strong leadership skills in both the
academic setting and the legal community. Mercer Law School will
greatly benefit from Dean Floyd's administrative leadership and
her commitment to excellence in teaching and legal scholarship."
Floyd is currently professor of law at Texas Tech University School
of Law. During her 13-year career with the university, she has served
two terms as associate dean for academic affairs. As associate dean,
she directed the law school's strategic planning process and coordinated
the self-study and site team visit in connection with the 1996 sabbatical
review by the American Bar Association and the Association of American
Law Schools.
Named the Phi Alpha Delta Professor of the Year, 2001, she was the
recipient of the New Professor Excellence in Teaching Award in 1995;
and the President's Excellence in Teaching Award in 1994.
Her reputation for excellence in scholarship and teaching has resulted
in her participation in three national studies with the Carnegie
Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. In 2002, she became
one of 12 participants to engage in a two-year study, "Cross-Professions
Seminar," regarding the intersection between liberal education and
professional education. In 2001, she was named a Carnegie Scholar
and was one of only 30 higher education leaders and of only two
law faculty members chosen nationwide to participate in a year-long
project to advance the scholarship of teaching and learning. In
2000, she participated in the Foundation's "Preparation for the
Professions Project," a study of legal education, and taught a Carnegie
Seminar on Legal Education.
Earlier in her career, Floyd was director of the Legal Research
and Writing Program, University of Georgia School of Law, and an
attorney with Alston, Miller & Gaines (now Alston & Bird) in Atlanta.
After attending Randolph-Macon Woman's College, 1973-75, Floyd graduated
summa cum laude with a bachelor's and master's degree in political
science from Emory University in 1977, where she was tapped for
Phi Beta Kappa. She earned the juris doctor degree cum laude from
the University of Georgia in 1980. While a law student, she served
as articles editor for the Georgia Law Review and was a Castellow
Scholar and the recipient of the American Jurisprudence Award, Trusts
and Estates.
A member of the State Bars of Georgia and Texas, and the American
Bar Association, she is a Fellow of the American Bar Foundation
and the Texas Bar Foundation. She serves on the faculty of the National
Institute for Trial Advocacy (NITA), the National Judicial College,
the Texas Judicial Academy, and the Texas Center for the Judiciary,
where she is also a member of the Judicial PEER Committee. She is
a member of the Board of Directors of the Lubbock Legal Aid Society.
Among her presentations given in 2003 are "Opinion Writing" for
the College of New Judges, Texas Center for the Judiciary; "Advanced
Evidence: Hearsay and Character," Fall Judicial Institute, Texas
Judicial Academy; "Challenging Discrimination," Institute for Leadership
and Social Justice; "Effective Judicial Writing," Texas Judicial
Academy, Texas Association of Counties; and ""Lawyering and its
Discontents: Reclaiming Meaning in the Practice of Law," Touro College
Law Center.
The Law Dean Search Committee was chaired by attorney James A. Bishop
of Brunswick, who is chairman of the Mercer University Board of
Trustees and a Mercer law alumnus. "The Search Committee had the
opportunity to review the credentials of many outstanding individuals
across the country," said Bishop, adding the recommendation to the
President was by unanimous vote of the committee. "Daisy Hurst Floyd
was an exceptional candidate. Her career speaks well of her commitment
to be a leader in educating men and women to become the finest in
the legal profession. Under her leadership, the Mercer Law School
will be well served for many years to come."
Speaking on her appointment, Floyd said, "I look forward to working
with the outstanding faculty, staff, students and alumni of Mercer
to further the Law School's distinctive mission. Mercer stands out
in American legal education for providing a positive educational
environment, emphasizing legal writing and professionalism, and
preparing its graduates to regard the practice of law as a calling.
Mercer is poised to become a leader in the national conversation
about the changing legal profession, and I am excited to be a part
of its future."
She and her husband, Tim Floyd, also a University of Georgia School
of Law graduate, have two children, Kate, 22, and Will, 18.
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