84°F
weather icon Clear

UNLV’s Boyd Law School dean to step down

UNLV announced Friday that Boyd Law School Dean Dan Hamilton will leave the school June 30 to focus on “pressing family matters.”

Hamilton has led the law school since 2013. Under his leadership, the school has “risen to new heights,” including jumps in national rankings, fundraising, community service and recruiting prominent faculty, UNLV Executive Vice President and Provost Chris Heavey wrote in a letter to the campus community.

Hamilton established the nation’s first master of laws (LL.M.) program in gaming law and regulation in 2015, “which has attracted students from around the nation and all over the world,” Heavey wrote.

He also enlisted former U.S. Sen. Harry Reid to become a distinguished fellow in law and policy.

“With Senator Reid, the law school built the Senator Reid Civic Dialogue Program, which not only raised the national profile of the law school, it brought in speakers including President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, and Congressman James Clyburn,” Heavey wrote.

And this year, the law school launched a Diversity Pipeline Program “named for retired Nevada Supreme Court Justice Michael Douglas to bring college students from underrepresented groups across the state to learn about the school and potential careers in the law,” according to the letter.

Contact Julie Wootton-Greener at jgreener@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2921. Follow @julieswootton on Twitter.

THE LATEST
 
UNLV president: No plans to divest from investments in Israel

UNLV President Keith Whitfield Sunday denied reports that he was considering releasing details about the university’s assets invested in firms with ties to Israel and divesting from them.

Parents of children sexually abused by school bus driver sue CCSD

The children who suffered sexual abuse at the hands of a Clark County School District bus driver have, through their parents, filed a lawsuit alleging that the district either knew or should have known the risk they faced.