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Legal Knowledge

Legal Knowledge

By: Arthur J. Morris Law Library
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Legal Knowledge is a podcast that chronicles the history of the University of Virginia School of Law. In this inaugural season, host Meggan Cashwell and a group of scholars discuss the first hundred years of UVA Law, from Thomas Jefferson's founding vision in 1819 to coeducation in 1920.2023 World
Episodes
  • We Demand: Student Advocates for Curricular Change, 1960-1980
    Apr 22 2026

    Professor Claudrena Harold joins cohost Loren Moulds to discuss law student activism in the 1960s and 70s as an engine of institutional change, particularly around faculty hiring and curricular expansion. She illuminates the university in this period as a coming together of students transformed—at different times and in different ways—by the political and social movements of the day. Law students asked how legal education could and should prepare them to meet this new moment. Harold uses the examples of the Black Law Students Association and the Virginia Law Women, both founded at UVA in the early 1970s, to highlight the central role that student advocacy played in building the curricular infrastructure of the modern UVA Law School.

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    34 mins
  • Gregory H. Swanson and the Integration of UVA Law
    Apr 9 2026

    In this episode, former Law School dean Risa Goluboff and alumna Biruktawit Assefa join coauthor (and cohost) Randi Flaherty to discuss how attorney Gregory H. Swanson became the first Black student to integrate the University of Virginia and the UVA School of Law in 1950. In addition to sharing the story of Swanson's time at UVA, these authors explore what was happening in the field of legal education and in desegregation efforts related to higher education at the time of Swanson's ultimately successful bid to enroll as a graduate student at UVA Law.

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    50 mins
  • Becoming a National Law School, 1920-1960
    Feb 18 2026

    In this episode, UVA Law Professor G. Edward White takes listeners back to 1972 when he first arrived in Charlottesville to teach law. White situates his personal experiences as a former clerk for Chief Justice Earl Warren and as an early scholar in legal history within the broader transformation of American legal education in the mid-twentieth century. As a member of the faculty for over fifty years, White provides an eyewitness account of the Law School's development from a predominantly southern law school to a national one.

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    27 mins
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