Theodore M. Shaw, director-counsel and president of the NAACP Legal
Defense and Educational Fund, has returned to his alma mater and joined
the faculty of Columbia Law School, the school announced Tuesday. He
will be a professor of professional practice, teaching classes in civil
procedure and constitutional law.
“Since his graduation in 1979, Ted Shaw has carried on a great Columbia
Law School tradition of leadership in civil rights advocacy,” said
David M. Schizer, the law school’s dean and Lucy G. Moses Professor of
Law, in a statement announcing Shaw’s hiring. “We welcome him to the
faculty where his broad experience and his creativity and insight as an
advocate and scholar will add depth to our public law programs.”
After the Legal Defense Fund of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People in 1982, Shaw participated in a number of
watershed cases. He served as lead counsel of a coalition representing
African American and Latino students in the University of Michigan
undergraduate affirmative action admissions case. In 2003, the United
States Supreme Court heard Gratz v. Bollinger and Grutter v. Bollinger,
which challenged the use of affirmative action at the University of
Michigan Law School. The following May, Shaw became the fifth person to
lead the Legal Defense Fund in the organization’s 64-year history.
Prior to joining the Legal Defense Fund, Shaw worked from 1979-1982 as
a trial attorney in the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of
Justice in Washington, D.C., litigating civil rights cases throughout
the country at the trial and appellate levels and at the U.S. Supreme
Court.
Prior to attending Columbia Law School, Shaw had graduated with honors
from Wesleyan University. His numerous professional honors and awards
include Columbia Law School’s Lawrence A. Wein Prize for Social Justice
and the National Bar Association Young Lawyers Division’s A. Leon
Higginbotham Jr. Memorial Award. He has served on both Columbia Law
School’s Board of Visitors and the Wesleyan University Board of
Trustees, and has previously taught at the University of Michigan Law
School, Temple Law School and the City University of New York School of
Law, and served as a lecturer in law at Columbia Law School.