School of Law faculty members Makau Mutua and Judy Scales-Trent have received awards from the regional National Black Law Students Association (NBLSA) for their commitment to educating students of color.
The awards were presented Feb. 7 during a dinner highlighting the 30th annual regional convention of the organization, hosted by the UB chapter and attended by some 350 law students from the Northeast.
NBLSA, through its 210 college and university chapters, advances education, development and growth of African-American law students.
Mutua, associate professor of law, received the Thurgood Marshall Award recognizing his continued commitment to the education and training of law students of color at UB, as well as his experience in international law.
Scales-Trent, professor of law, received the Barbara Jordan Award for Faculty Excellence recognizing her commitment to educating law students of color and her teaching methods and impact on the education of UB law students.
Scales-Trent authored "Notes of a White Black Woman" and is continuing research comparing racial-purity laws in the U.S., Nazi Germany and South Africa.
She earned a law degree from Northwestern University and has served as an attorney for the Appellate Division, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and special assistant to general counsel and commissioner of the EEOC.
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