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- That’s why I remember and celebrate her, and that is why so many of us are here together in this issue of the Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics to celebrate the wonderful and generous Charity Scott.
- There were a number of nominees that year, but Charity Scott rose to the top of the list. While many know Charity as a skillful program builder, she is also a masterful teacher and well-deserved this award. In this tribute, I share the remarks I made in 2006 when I announced the winner of the Jay Healey Health Law Teachers Award.
- The HeLP Legal Services Clinic would take bit longer before opening in 2007 under the leadership of Charity Scott as its director and clinical professors Sylvia Caley and Lisa Bliss.
- As Steve Kaminshine said in his comments at the symposium honoring Charity Scott, I was recruited to come to Georgia State University as a “Law and Bioethics” scholar who had spent more than sixteen years shuttling between an office in a hospital and another in a law school.
- Charity Scott brought health law to Georgia State College of Law in the fall of 1987. Through her faculty appointment, along with her boundless energy and intellectual curiosity, she set herself on an odyssey. She began by teaching a single general health law class. This beginning led to the development of a full curriculum in the field, complete with experiential learning opportunities and a certificate in health law program.
- obId=27561743 > • “Remembering Charity Scott,” < http://newsmanager.commpartners.com/aslme/issues/2023-03-21/index.html > • “In Memoriam: Charity Scott,” Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics compendium, < https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-law-medicine-and-ethics/jlme-spotlight-collections/charity-scott > • “Charity Scott (1951 - 2023),” < https://news.gsu.edu/2023/03/22/charity-scott-1951-2023/ > • “Celebrating Charity Scott,” < https://law.gsu.edu/2020/06/09/celebrating-charity-scott
- I should footnote the preceding statement: Charity Scott, for one, identified that possibility.
- Albert Einstein 1 Georgia State University College of Law Professor Emerita Charity Scott quoted these words from Albert Einstein in June of 2022 as she concluded a tribute to Professor Joseph (Jay) M. Healey, one of the founding lights of health law and health law teaching. She chose the quote because she thought the words and sentiment would resonate with Jay. I repeat it because Dr. Einstein’s words capture the essence and heart of Charity’s approach to teaching, pedagogy, and life.
- It was a great privilege to know Professor Charity Scott. I first met her when I was finishing Emory University’s joint law and public health program in the early 2000s, through the Office of General Counsel at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC), in the early days of CDC’s Public Health Law Program, now the Office of Public Health Law Services.
- Anyone who knew Charity Scott knows that she lived a life devoted to providing and improving the health of her community, the education of law students about health law and its use to improve the health of her community, and social welfare by addressing the socio-economic determinants of health. If she had not been assigned that name at birth, those of us who knew her could have easily assigned Charity as a nickname.
- Charity Scott was a powerful, impactful advocate who worked to improve health and shape the growth and maturation of our field by building and strengthening countless bridges, not only between colleagues, but also between our inner and professional lives, our creative and scientific sides, and our roles as scholars and teachers.
- “Mindfulness is awareness, cultivated by paying attention in a sustained and particular way: on purpose, in the present moment, and non-judgmentally.” 1 This is how Georgia State University College of Law Professor Charity Scott introduced the concept of mindfulness to numerous law students and lawyers.
- Scott, J.D., is a Professor of Law and Director of the Center for Law, Health & Society at the Georgia State University College of Law.
- I welcome your responses and your contributions to this ongoing column. – charity scott genetics and group rights • fall 2007 491 antagonizing the students, especially if the professor’s views relate more to hot political controversies than to the assigned reading.
- During interviews with leaders in public health law academics, interviewees consistently recommended two leaders: Charity Scott and Diane Hoffmann. They agreed to work together, with Scott directing the program and Hoffmann focusing on engaging the deans.
- HeLP launched in 2004 and was the brainchild of Sylvia Caley and Charity Scott, the founding director of the Center for Law, Health, & Society, and their tireless efforts to build an MLP in the Atlanta area. Charity Scott, with her keen understanding of the needs of both the potential clients and of law students, served as the founding director of the HeLP Clinic at Georgia State Law launched in 2007.
- One of his core themes, and the one that most closely reminds me of the message that I and many others in the health law community received from Charity Scott, is that each person is worthy, with unique gifts that can find their fullest expression when nurtured in relationship with others.
- Lombardo, and Yaniv Heled 219 A Tribute to Professor Charity Scott Steven J. Kaminshine 224 Charity Scott — A Masterful Teacher Diane E. Hoffmann 228 A Tribute to Professor Charity Scott: Imagination, Reflection, and the Jay Healey Teaching Plenary Sidney D. Watson 232 Charity’s Neighborhoods Mary A. Crossley This tribute compares Charity Scott to Fred Rogers, high- lighting how Charity nurturedhealth law colleagues’ unique gifts and built community.