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Shauna Marshall is a Professor of Law and the Academic
Dean of University of California, Hastings College of the Law. She
received her B.A. from Washington University, St. Louis and her J.D.
from UC Davis School of Law. Upon graduation from law school, she
joined the U.S. Justice Department's Honor Program as a trial
attorney in the Antitrust Division. She left the Justice Department
in 1984 and spent six years as a staff attorney for Equal Rights
Advocates, working on impact cases and public education and
organizing campaigns on behalf of low-income women and women of
color. She spent the next four years in the Stanford and East Palo
Alto community, receiving her J.S.M. from Stanford, lecturing in the
areas of civil rights and community law practice at Stanford Law
School, and directing the East Palo Alto Community Law Project. She
joined the UC Hastings faculty as a Clinical Professor in 1994,
served as Associate Academic Dean from 2000 to 2002, and became
Academic Dean in 2005.
Dean Marshall's writings reflect her
interest in ethical issues apparent in community law practice and
civil rights litigation. Two of her articles, "Class Actions As
Instruments of Change: Reflections on Davis v. City & County of
San Francisco" and "Mission Impossible: Ethical Community Lawyering"
explore the competing interests of class members in an employment
discrimination case and community groups in East Palo Alto. She
enjoys traveling, quiet weekends along the Russian River, and
spending time with her family.
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