Charity Scott

Charity Scott (born 1951 in Boston) is the Catherine C. Henson Professor of Law at Georgia State University, known for founding the Center for Law, Health, and Society at Georgia State University.[1]

Scott was born in Boston in 1951 into a family of legal scholars, including her grandfather Austin Wakeman Scott. She grew up on the campus of Stanford University and in Westfield, New York, and attended Stanford University and Harvard Law School. After private legal practice in Baltimore and Atlanta, she first taught at the Emory University Business School and then joined the law faculty at GSU in 1988.

Scott's interest in health law began while she was in private practice in the early 1980s at Venable, Baetjer & Howard, where she was among the earliest to apply antitrust law to hospitals. This experience was an inspiration to develop programs on health care law after her switch to academia. According to US News and World Report, the GSU Law School now ranks #2 nationally in the area of Health Care Law. [2]. GSU's health care law program is notable for community involvement with hospitals and with Georgia Legal Services through a clinic called The Health Law Partnership (HeLP) [3], founded in 2007, and for the academic Center for Law, Health and Society.

Scott has introduced many innovations into the teaching of law, including the incorporation of techniques from improv comedy in the legal classroom and designing courses on mindfulness and the law.

Awards and honors

Scott is an elected member of the American Law Institute. In 2006, she received the Jay Healey Distinguished Health Law Professor Award, presented by the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics. In 2010 she was the recipient of the Heroes in Healthcare Ethics Award, presented by the Health Care Ethics Consortium of Georgia. In 2016, she received a community service award for “Vision, Inspiration, and Resourcefulness in the Creation of the Health Law Partnership.” Scott was awarded the Health Law Community Service Award by the American Association of Law Schools’ Section on Law, Medicine, and Health Care in 2018. At GSU her awards have included the College of Law's David J. Maleski Award for Teaching Excellence and the Exceptional Service Award.

gollark: Besides, Sputnik had bad quality control issues, they'd probably mess up the chips.
gollark: Why would we distribute microchips via vaccines? That would be very obvious. They self-assemble out of bits in food and larger airborne particulates.
gollark: Probably next week. You can help by eating more silicon and various exotic nonmetals.
gollark: Not really, the transmit power is lower than it should be. We had to offload its data onto your backup microchip.
gollark: Why? They can totally be made that via something something determinant.

References

  1. "Charity Scott Honored for Work in Health Law Partnership" (Press release). Georgia State University. 29 July 2016. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  2. "US News rankings 2020" (Press release). Georgia State University. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  3. "The Health Law Partnership (HeLP) Clinic" (Press release). Retrieved 20 May 2020.
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