A number of wonderful textbooks have been authored and published for the teaching of leadership in law schools. But lawyer-leader education can also benefit from books, articles, and other media produced by academics in law and other fields and from legal practitioners and those they represent in their practices. This webinar, a moderated discussion, samples from non-law books that have value in teaching leadership personas, principles, and practices to law students.
Beth Ford served as the Community Defender for the Eastern District of Tennessee for 24 years. She began working at Federal Defender Services when the office was created in 1992. Before 1992, she was the Area Legal Counsel for the Tennessee Department of Human Services (now Children’s Services) for 13 years. She was previously in private practice as Newport, Tennessee’s first woman lawyer. She currently teaches and consults with defender organizations about quality of representation.
Ford has taught trial practice for 14 years as well as Adjudicatory Criminal Procedure at the College of Law, Criminal Procedure in the college’s MLS program, and criminal procedure at Pellissippi in the paralegal program.
She is past chair of the College of Law Alumni Council and currently a member of the Dean’s Circle and the Leadership Institute’s board of directors.
She has been recognized with the UT Alumni Service Award and with the Bernstein-Ritchie Award for service to the Legal Clinic. In 2023, she received the Knoxville Bar Association’s Governor’s Award for service to the profession. In the community, she is active with the YWCA, the Knoxville Bar Association and Messiah Lutheran Church.
Professor Heminway brought nearly 15 years of corporate practice experience to the University of Tennessee College of Law when she joined the faculty in 2000. She practiced transactional business law (working in the areas of public offerings, private placements, mergers, acquisitions, dispositions, and restructurings) in the Boston office of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP from 1985 through 2000. She has served as an expert witness and consultant on business entity and finance and federal and state securities law matters and is a frequent academic and continuing legal education presenter on business law issues. Professor Heminway also has represented pro bono clients on political asylum applications, landlord/tenant appeals, social security/disability cases, and not-for-profit incorporations and related business law issues.
In her research and writing, Professor Heminway focuses most closely on disclosure regulation and policy under federal securities (including insider trading) law and state entity (especially corporate) law. Some of her work explores these topics in the context of sex or gender difference. She is best known for her recent work involving crowdfunding and, before that, for a series of articles relating to the insider trading and criminal securities fraud actions brought against Martha Stewart in connection with her December 2001 sale of ImClone Systems, Inc. common stock. Other areas of interest manifested in her work include institutional reform at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, teaching business law, and business finance and governance planning and drafting. She has coauthored a series of annotated merger and acquisition agreements and related ancillary documents for Transactions: The Tennessee Journal of Business Law. Her work has been published in a wide variety of general and specialty journals. She also has authored numerous academic and trade book chapters and co-authored two business law teaching texts: Business Enterprises: Legal Structures, Governance, and Policy (Carolina Academic Press, 4th ed. 2020) and Martha Stewart’s Legal Troubles (Carolina Academic Press 2006).
Professor Heminway is a member of the American Law Institute and is a research fellow of the Neel Corporate Governance Center, the Anderson Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, and the UT Center for the Study of Social Justice. She has been a visiting professor at Boston College Law School and at Vanderbilt University Law School and has taught business law courses in study abroad programs in Brazil and England. She also teaches business law in the professional MBA program at the Haslam College of Business.
She currently serves on the executive council of the Tennessee Bar Association’s Business Law Section and was the section’s chair from 2019-20. She was president of the campus faculty senate for the 2010-11 academic year, Mic/Nite coordinator from 2016-19, and co-chair of the Chancellor’s Commission for Women for the 2020-21 and 2021-22 academic years. She is serving as a member of the University of Tennessee Knoxville advisory board for a two-year term ending in June 2024.