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A tribute to Lauren Edelman

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Michael McCann*
Affiliation:
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA
*
Michael McCann, 6746 39th Avenue SW, Seattle, WA 98136, USA. Email: mwmccann@uw.edu

Extract

We have lost a great one. Laurie Edelman was a gentle, generous, ingenious, and generative giant in socio-legal studies. Her passing is devastating for me, for many others, and generally for our field of intellectual inquiry.

I was not a close personal friend with Laurie in the way that many were, especially those who worked and lived in close geographic proximity to her. But I interacted and collaborated often with Laurie for most of the last 30 years, especially since she took a faculty position at Berkeley in 1996. We were roughly the same age and our treks through academic life were parallel in many ways. From our earliest encounters, she was for me a constant source of inspiration, a role model, a catalyst, a teacher, and more. These engagements were more than enough for me to witness her ironic sense of humor, her gracious support of others, her love of intellectual exchange, and her profound commitments as a scholar, teacher, public intellectual, and professional colleague. I will not try here to summarize her many, many activities and accomplishments, although I urge people to spend some time reading her lengthy CV, various profiles, and testaments from others to appreciate all that she did and how she mattered. Instead, I will focus my reflections on the various points of direct interaction with Laurie that mattered most to me and qualify me for commentary.

Type
Review Essay
Copyright
Copyright © 2023 Law and Society Association.

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Footnotes

Michael McCann is Gordon Hirabayashi Professor for the Advancement of Citizenship Emeritus at the University of Washington. McCann is author of over sixty article-length publications and author, co-author, editor, or co-editor of eight books, including the multi-award winning monographs Rights at Work: Pay Equity Reform and the Politics of Legal Mobilization (Chicago, 1994) and (with William Haltom) Distorting the Law: Politics, Media, and the Litigation Crisis (Chicago, 2004). His latest book, with George Lovell, is Union by Law: Filipino American Labor Activists, Rights Radicalism, and Racial Capitalism (Chicago, 2020). Michael served as the founding director of the Law, Societies, & Justice Program for a decade, three terms as Political Science department chair, and two terms as the Director of the Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies. McCann is winner of a university Distinguished Teaching Award and a Marsha Landolt Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award as well as the Stanton Wheeler Mentoring Award and the Harry J. Kalven, Jr. Prize from the Law & Society Association. Michael also was LSA president in 2011-13.