Donna Cox Wells (left) and Chase Griffin. Photo credit: Trever Ducote/UCLA
Donna Cox Wells (left) and Chase Griffin. Photo credit: Trever Ducote/UCLA

Two distinguished members of the UCLA School of Law community – Donna Cox Wells ’92 and Chase Griffin M.L.S. ’24 – are among the distinguished graduates who were honored with UCLA Awards by the UCLA Alumni Association for their extraordinary achievements, leadership and contributions to the university, their communities and the world.

From left: Alicia Miñana de Lovelace, Laura Gómez and Gómez's mother, Eloyda Gómez, at a symposium honoring Laura Gómez's work.
From left: Alicia Miñana de Lovelace, Laura Gómez and Gómez's mother, Eloyda Gómez, at a symposium honoring Laura Gómez's work.

UCLA School of Law has received a $1 million gift from alumna Alicia Miñana de Lovelace ’87, chair of the UCLA Foundation board, to significantly bolster the law school’s Critical Race Studies program and its forward-looking efforts to promote Latinx scholars and scholarship.

“Boosting opportunities and creating meaningful change is never easy and takes a group effort — which is precisely what UCLA Law and CRS have been doing for a long time now. This is the perfect place to continue tackling these challenges head on.”

Alicia Miñana de Lovelace ’87

Miñana de Lovelace is the immediate past chair of the UCLA Law Board of Advisors and is co-chair of the UCLA Second Century Council. She announced her gift at a March 2024 symposium that celebrated Gómez’s career.

Jasleen Kohli, executive director of the CRS program, says, “Alicia’s visionary gift to CRS will serve two vital roles. It will ensure the growth of Latinx legal studies here at UCLA Law and serve as a call to action, inspiring the growth of Latinx legal scholars.”

Gómez holds the Rachel F. Moran Endowed Chair in Law and joined the UCLA Law faculty in 1994. She has served as a vice dean of the law school and the interim dean of the social sciences division of UCLA College. She was also a professor of law and American studies and an associate dean of the law school at the University of New Mexico. Her decades of scholarly work and community engagement reveal her deep commitment to civil rights and Latinx communities. Her 2020 book, Inventing Latinos: A New Story of American Racism, and her 2007 book, Manifest Destinies: The Making of the Mexican American Race, have drawn wide acclaim and recognition. In 2023, she was elected to the board of MALDEF, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the most prominent civil rights organization advocating on behalf of Latinos.

Gómez has also been a dedicated mentor of students and future scholars in Latinx issues, deeply engaging with them through her teaching and supervision. For many years, she taught the UCLA Law seminar Latinos and the Law, which considers the position of Latin American people in the U.S. vis-à-vis the American legal system. Gómez Teaching Fellows will continue her work by teaching the seminar to new generations of students.

In 2000, Gómez was only the second Latina law professor to earn tenure at a top-20 law school. But Miñana de Lovelace emphasizes that one reason for her gift is how growth in the ranks of Latinx law professors and legal practitioners more broadly has been frustratingly slow. Hispanic and Latinx people comprise 36% of California’s population but make up just 7% of the state’s licensed active attorneys.

“Boosting opportunities and creating meaningful change is never easy and takes a group effort — which is precisely what UCLA Law and CRS have been doing for a long time now,” Miñana de Lovelace says. “This is the perfect place to continue tackling these challenges head on.”

The contribution is the most recent in Miñana de Lovelace’s history of leadership and philanthropic engagement with UCLA Law. In 2020, a $5 million gift from Miñana de Lovelace and her husband, Rob Lovelace, launched the law school’s Center for Immigration Law and Policy. In 2021, another gift established the Alicia Miñana Chair in Law, designed to support a faculty member with interests at the intersection of human rights and immigration or migration law. The chair is currently held by E. Tendayi Achiume, the recent winner of a MacArthur “genius” grant, who was the first woman to serve as the United Nations’ special rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance. In 2013, UCLA Law presented Miñana de Lovelace with one of its Distinguished Alumni of the Year awards, for her outstanding contributions to public and community service.

“We are so fortunate to have Alicia Miñana de Lovelace as a leading member of the UCLA Law community, and this gift is just the most recent example of her enduring — and truly changemaking — partnership,” UCLA Law Dean Michael Waterstone says. “Her insightful dedication to legal scholarship, thoughtful advocacy and the raising of future voices has already made an indelible impact on the law school and our neighbors across California and the nation. I could not be more proud that she has created this fellowship in honor of Laura E. Gómez, a real trailblazer in the law, as an investment in the growth of Latinx legal studies and scholars. The successes that it yields will resonate for ages.”

Left to right: Kitty Young and Evan Mitchell Zepeda hold photos of their relatives, civil rights icons Joseph L. Rauh Jr. and Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.
Kitty Young (left) and Evan Mitchell Zepeda hold photos of their relatives, civil rights icons Joseph L. Rauh Jr. and Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.

When Katharine “Kitty” Young ’24 and Evan Mitchell Zepeda ’24 met in their 1L section at UCLA School of Law in the opening days of the Fall 2021 semester, neither of them anticipated the incredible connection that they would make through their years as classmates and friends. By chance, both women had been raised in Maryland, and they had traveled far from their hometowns to forge careers in California.

A special symposium celebrated Professor Gómez's retirement and honored her groundbreaking career and tremendous impact on Critical Race Studies, UCLA School of Law, and legal and academic communities at large. 

See the symposium program

Symposium Agenda

View video of the symposium here

3 p.m. — Welcome 

Remarks from

  • Michael Waterstone, Dean of UCLA School of Law
  • Cheryl I. Harris, Vice Dean for Community, Equality and Justice; Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Professor in Civil Rights and Civil Liberties 
  • Uriel Saldivar Esteban, J.D. Candidate '25 & Community Service Chair, UCLA Latinx Law Students Association

3:30 p.m. — Manifest Destinies: The Making of the Mexican American Race

Panelists will discuss Professor Gómez's groundbreaking 2007 text, which has been established as an essential resource for understanding the complex history of Mexican Americans and racial classification in the United States. 

  • Moderator: Jerry Kang, Distinguished Professor of Law; Founding Vice Chancellor for Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (2015-20), UCLA School of Law 
  • Genevieve Carpio, Associate Professor, César E. Chávez Department of Chicana/o Studies, UCLA 
  • Nicholas Espíritu (Law '04), Deputy Director, Legal, National Immigration Law Center
  • Casandra Salgado (Ph.D. Sociology '19), Assistant Professor, Sociology, Arizona State University 

4:30 p.m.Break

4:45 p.m. — Inventing Latinos: A New Story of American Racism

Panelists will discuss Professor Gómez's most recent book exploring the impact of Latinos’ new collective racial identity on the way Americans understand race. 

  • Moderator: Aslı Ü. Bâli, Professor of Law, Yale Law School  
  • Walter Allen, Distinguished Professor of Education, Sociology, and African American Studies; Allan Murray Cartter Chair in Higher Education, UCLA School of Education & Information Studies 
  • Sherene H. Razack, Chair and Distinguished Professor, Gender Studies; Penny Kanner Endowed Chair in Women's Studies, UCLA  
  • Saúl Sarabia (Law '96), Founder and Director, Solidarity Consulting 

5:45 p.m.Keynote by Laura E. Gómez, Rachel F. Moran Endowed Chair in Law 

Introduction by Devon W. Carbado, The Honorable Harry Pregerson Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law (Read by Executive Director of the Critical Race Studies Program Jasleen Kohli, with additional remarks.)

6:30 p.m.  Reception and Dinner in Shapiro Courtyard

Remarks from

  • LaToya Baldwin Clark, Professor of Law; Faculty Director, Critical Race Studies Program, UCLA School of Law 
  • Jasleen Kohli, Executive Director, Critical Race Studies Program, UCLA School of Law  

CO-SPONSORS

 

Professor Gómez's website
Taifha Natalee Alexander

Taifha Natalee Alexander LL.M. ’21, who directs the CRT Forward project within UCLA School of Law’s Critical Race Studies program, has been honored as an Emerging Scholar by Diverse: Issues in Higher Education. Alexander is among 15 scholars, out of several hundred nominees, who earned the prestigious recognition for 2024. The honor celebrates the accomplishments and impact of rising stars in academia who are under age 40.

Kendra Fox-Davis

Kendra Fox-Davis ’06 brings a unique “inside-outside” perspective to her work. She has dedicated her career to protecting civil rights, from grassroots activism as a student to being a civil rights attorney for the U.S. Department of Education, and later working within the University of California to ensure compliance with anti-discrimination laws and policies. Now, as the chief program officer of the Rosenberg Foundation, Fox-Davis steers philanthropic investments to social causes and organizations, from civil rights to criminal justice reform.

“CRS was everything to me as a law student — an intellectual home, an inspiration, a North Star in terms of staying focused on the purpose of why I came to law school.”

Outstanding new members boost law school faculty and administration in 2023–24.


 

New Tenure-Track Faculty

Ariela GrossARIELA GROSS
Distinguished Professor of Law

New Senior Leaders

Timothy CaseyTIMOTHY CASEY
Director of Curricular Administration and Professor from Practice

Tim Casey will teach Professional Responsibility and provide support for the non-senate law faculty. He started his teaching career at Columbia Law School, where he established a Criminal Practice Clinic and received the Presidential Award for teaching. He also held an appointment as a professor of law at Case Western Reserve University. And he received a Fulbright award for research and teaching in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Most recently, Casey served as the director of the STEPPS Program and professor in residence at California Western School of Law, where he oversaw an innovative program in legal ethics and lawyering skills. He also was a visiting professor at the University of San Diego School of Law. Before entering legal academia, he practiced law as a public defender in New York City.

Casey is an internationally recognized expert in experiential legal education. His research interests include legal ethics, surveillance and civil liberties, problem-solving courts and experiential pedagogy. He is a co-author of Legal Ethics in the Practice of Law (Carolina Academic Press, Fifth Edition, 2019), and his scholarship has appeared in law reviews including UC Davis Law Review and SMU Law Review. He serves as chair of the Legal Ethics Committee of the San Diego County Bar Association, a board member for local and international non-profit organizations, and a member of the editorial board for the peer-reviewed Clinical Law Review.

He received his B.A. from Boston College, J.D. from UC Law San Francisco and LL.M. from Columbia Law School.


Hannah GarryHANNAH GARRY
Executive Director of the Promise Institute and Professor from Practice

Hannah Garry joins UCLA Law as executive director of the Promise Institute for Human Rights and professor from practice. Garry has devoted her legal career to seeking justice and accountability for human rights abuses and atrocity situations across the globe, while making the U.S. a destination for the study and practice of human rights law.

She joins UCLA Law from USC Gould School of Law, where she was clinical professor of law and founding director of the International Human Rights Clinic for 12 years. Her areas of teaching and scholarship include international criminal law, transitional justice, international human rights law and international refugee law. She has supervised student attorneys in the clinic on cases and projects nationally and internationally that address atrocity crimes, refugee rights, fair trial rights, gender justice, human trafficking and systemic racism.

Garry’s career as an international human rights advocate, scholar and teacher took root when she was a graduate student at Oxford University’s Refugee Studies Centre. After graduation, she was hired by Oxford as a field researcher visiting refugee camps throughout Uganda and Kenya for two years where she witnessed and documented first-hand the abuses refugees endure in exile while under the protection of the international community.

Garry has held many other academic and expert legal advisor positions, including in international criminal courts and leading human rights organizations, and she has been quoted widely in major media outlets. Last year, she was a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Oslo Law’s PluriCourts Centre in Norway.

Garry earned her J.D. from UC Berkeley and master’s in international affairs from Columbia University.


Melissa GoodmanMELISSA GOODMAN
Executive Director of the Center on Reproductive Health, Law, and Policy

Melissa Goodman joins UCLA Law as the inaugural executive director of the Center on Reproductive Health, Law, and Policy after a five-year tenure as the legal and advocacy director for the ACLU of Southern California. There, Goodman led 60 attorneys across Southern California and oversaw the department’s visioning and strategy, strategic planning, intersectional issue and cross-team collaboration and resource allocation. In doing so, she helped lead statewide legislative, electoral and organizing strategy. She also co- chaired the national ACLU’s Gender Justice Task Force.

Goodman previously spent a decade as the ACLU SoCal’s Audrey Irmas Director of the LGBTQ Gender and Reproductive Justice Project, and as a senior litigation and policy counsel for reproductive and LGBTQ rights at the New York Civil Liberties Union. In those roles, she led and participated in reproductive justice, LGBTQ and gender equity litigation, as well as policy advocacy campaigns. Along the way, Goodman led or co-counseled an array of high-profile cases, including those involving pregnant unaccompanied immigrant minors; gay, bisexual and transgender prisoners; and same-gender couples.

Goodman clerked for Judge Frederic Block of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York. She earned her B.A., magna cum laude, from New York University and her J.D. from NYU School of Law.

 

New Lecturers

Emily ChurgEMILY CHURG
Lecturer in Law

Emily Churg teaches Legal Research and Writing. She previously practiced complex commercial litigation at WilmerHale and ran her own bar exam preparation company. She has also taught legal writing at USC Gould School of Law and undergraduate writing at Arizona State University.

She earned her B.A., with honors, from UC Santa Cruz; her Ph.D. in rhetoric, composition and linguistics from Arizona State; and her J.D., Order of the Coif, from UC Davis School of Law. After law school, she clerked for Judge S. James Otero of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.


Thomas WaneboTHOMAS WANEBO
Lecturer in Law

Thomas Wanebo teaches Legal Analysis, Writing, and Research for LL.M. students. He currently works as a trial attorney at Neighborhood Legal Services of Los Angeles County, defending low-income families against eviction. He began his career as a litigation associate at Irell & Manella in Los Angeles.

Wanebo earned his B.A. from Colorado State University and his J.D. from UCLA Law, where he was a senior editor of the UCLA Law Review. His publications include the article “Remote Killing and the Fourth Amendment: Updating Constitutional Law to Address Expanded Police Lethality in the Robotic Age,” which appeared in the UCLA Law Review.

 

New Fellows

Melodi DincerMELODI DINCER
UCLA Institute for Technology, Law and Policy Fellow

Melodi Dincer will join UCLA Law in January 2024 as a fellow with the UCLA Institute for Technology, Law and Policy. Her work focuses on helping social movements fight algorithmic violence and build transformative futures.

She was previously an appellate advocacy fellow with the Electronic Privacy Information Center and has been a legal research fellow and clinical supervising attorney at NYU School of Law, where she earned her J.D. She earned her B.A. from Brown University.


Ruthie LazenbyRUTHIE LAZENBY
Shapiro Fellow in Environmental Law and Policy

As the Shapiro Fellow in Environmental Law and Policy for 2023–25, Ruthie Lazenby will be focusing on energy law and regulation. She was previously a staff attorney in the Environmental Justice Clinic at Vermont Law School and a legal fellow in the environmental justice program at New York Lawyers for the Public Interest.

She earned her B.A. from Wesleyan University and her J.D. from Yale Law School, where she was an editor of the Law and Political Economy Blog.


Read more in UCLA Law Magazine Fall 2023

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