BOSTON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW — Dean Angela Onwuachi-Willig had only been a tenure-track professor for four years when she decided to start a workshop that would help other black women law faculty advance in their careers. Now in its 14th year, the Lutie A. Lytle Black Women Law Faculty Workshop & Writing Retreat—named for the first Black woman admitted to the bar in the South (in Tennessee) as well as the bar in Kansas, and the first woman law professor in the United States—has helped its attendees publish more than 38 books, 115 book chapters, and 1,060 articles. “It’s a beautiful collection of women thinking together about how we can support each other,” says Onwuachi-Willig, an expert on critical race theory, employment discrimination, family law, and cultural sociology whose scholarship and mentorship have been honored twice by the Association of American Law Schools Section on Minority Groups. It’s also just one example of Onwuachi-Willig’s career-long commitment to increasing diversity in the legal profession.