Judge Bernice Donald to Speak at Nebraska Law

The Honorable Bernice Bouie Donald
The Honorable Bernice Bouie Donald

As President of the American Bar Foundation, I propose to share scholarly research looking at emerging trends in corporate law firms, in-house lawyers, solo and small firms. The research further examines the future directions of impact areas in law based on global competition. My talk will look at the past decades and compare the legal landscape to today, while looking broadly at the trajectory for those who have recently entered the profession. This will look critically at racial, ethnic, and gender diversity, and examine best practices for growth and competiveness. For the law students, I will focus on leadership, NALP statistics, clerkships, and navigating the employment situation. It will basically be about putting yourself in the best position to succeed now and in the future.

Honorable Bernice Bouie Donald
On December 1, 2010, President Obama nominated Judge Bernice Bouie Donald, age 60, to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Judge Donald is currently a United States District Judge in the Western District of Tennessee. She has been a federal judge for more than 20 years, and has almost 30 years of judicial experience. Judge Donald was elected to her first judicial position as a judge in the criminal division of the Court of General Sessions in Shelby County in 1982, making her the first female African-American judge in Tennessee history. She also became the nation’s first female African-American bankruptcy judge in 1988.

Judge Donald has had long and varied legal experience that includes private practice, public service, and legal academia. After graduating from law school, she opened a private law practice in Memphis and began teaching at Shelby State Community College. Soon thereafter she became a staff attorney with the Memphis Area Legal Services and then an Assistant Public Defender with the Shelby County Public Defender’s Office. In 1982 she was elected to the criminal division of the Shelby County General Sessions Court, making her the first female African-American judge in Tennessee history. She soon added a professorship at the University of Memphis School of Law, where she taught courses in legal research and professional responsibility. In 1988, she was appointed a United States Bankruptcy Judge for the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Tennessee, making her the first female African-American bankruptcy judge in the nation. President Clinton nominated Judge Donald to her current position on the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Tennessee in 1996.

Over the course of her career, Judge Donald has been affiliated with dozens of professional, business, and charitable groups. She has been extensively involved with the American Bar Association, serving as the Vice-Chair of the Bankruptcy Committee, a member of the ABA Journal Board of Editors, and as a member of the Business Law Section. She has been a member of the Executive Committee of the ABA Board of Governors since 2004, as well a member of dozens of ABA task forces and commissions over the years. She has been Vice-President of the American Bar Foundation since 2008 and has also been a member of the Board of Governors of the Tennessee bar Association. Judge Donald has also authored a number of academic works, on topics ranging from family law to criminal justice to judicial administration. Most significantly, she authored a 2005 study for the American Bar Association on the impact of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, a 2001 comparison of U.S., German, and Chinese trial practices, and co-authored a 2000 study of the summary judgment process.