Supporters endow scholarship in honor of former dean Susan Duncan
Published 6:00 am Wednesday, January 10, 2024
Alumni, friends pay tribute to former Law School dean
By Bill Dabney
A new scholarship in the University of Mississippi School of Law will serve as a perpetual tribute to the immediate past dean, Susan Duncan.
Alumni and friends of the school who were gathered at the 2023 meeting of the Mississippi Bar Convention surprised Duncan with the announcement of a scholarship fund established in her name.
“I am completely humbled and so honored,” said Duncan, who resigned as dean last year after serving six years, but remains at Ole Miss as a law professor. “As a faculty and staff, we made great strides on behalf of the law school during my tenure.
“We had challenges, not the least of which was navigating the unique aspects of educating students during a pandemic, but we prevailed together.
The Dean Susan Duncan School of Law Scholarship Fund was started by Suzette Matthews, development officer for the school, who considers Duncan one of her closest friends.
“I love Susan and I’m going to miss her so much. I want her legacy as dean to live on forever,” said Matthews, who appealed to alumni and friends for help funding the scholarship.
Donors responded enthusiastically with contributions nearing the $50,000 needed to permanently endow the scholarship.
Duncan is credited for increases in bar passage rates, enrollment, fundraising and career placement numbers. She’s also lauded for establishing Ole Miss Law School Cares, a program that allows alumni, faculty, staff or students who endure a traumatic event to receive help from members of the same community.
Duncan joined the Ole Miss law school as dean in August 2017. She is the first female to serve as law dean not in an interim capacity.
Her teaching and research interests include lawyering skills, education law, family law and restorative practices, and leadership. Her scholarship has focused primarily on issues surrounding children, including the need for anti-bullying laws and laws protecting children from pornography on the internet.
She advocates for the use of restorative practices in schools, universities and in the workplace, and her most recent scholarship focuses on gender inequities in the legal academy.
On the national level, Duncan has served in leadership positions on several boards that focus on the development of new legal writing professors. She frequently presents on legal writing and education law topics, and Business First named her as one of the top 20 people to know in the field of education.
Duncan’s work has garnered recognition by many, including such honors as the 2016 Kentucky Bar President Special Service Award, the 2014 Distinguished Alumni Award from Louis Brandeis School of Law and the 2010 Louisville Bar Association Award for Distinguished Service.
Before joining the Ole Miss faculty, she served as interim dean at the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law, where she started as an adjunct in 1997 and became a full-time faculty member in 2000. During her tenure, she served as chair of the university’s Commission on the Status of Women and was a member of multiple university committees.