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Penn chooses Virginia鈥檚 Elizabeth Magill as president

Provost at Virginia expected to take office in July, replacing Gutmann after high-profile 18-year tenure

Published on
January 13, 2022
Last updated
January 13, 2022
Source: University of Virginia
Elizabeth Magill

Elizabeth Magill, the provost of the University of Virginia, has been nominated by the trustees of the University of Pennsylvania to serve as its new president, replacing Amy Gutmann.

Professor Magill, a former dean of law at Stanford University, would assume the Ivy League campus鈥 presidency in July if Penn鈥檚 trustees, as expected in March, approve the nomination from their executive committee.

Penn dates to 1740, and Professor Gutmann has been leading it since 2004, as just the eighth president听听in 1930. A nationally prominent activist leader, Professor Gutmann announced her departure plans last year as US president Joe Biden听chose her to serve听as US ambassador to Germany.

Professor Magill was the听听at Virginia, where she earned her law degree after her bachelor鈥檚 degree in history at Yale University. Her career highlights including clerking for the late US Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

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At Stanford, Professor Magill established law education programmes that helped real-life clients with policy challenges, and provided students with global perspectives through classes in China, India, Europe and Latin America.

鈥淚 am humbled and honoured by the opportunity鈥 to lead Penn, she said in the university鈥檚 announcement of her selection. 鈥淔rom its founding, Penn set its sights on making a difference, and 282 years later the Penn community continues to change the world every day.鈥

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Professor Gutmann, an accomplished political scientist, has been a听听补苍诲听at timescontroversial听leader. Penn announced Professor Magill鈥檚 selection shortly after听听by the US Senate鈥檚 Foreign Relations Committee to endorse Professor Gutmann鈥檚 nomination for the ambassador post in Germany. In that, she faced some Republican opposition, centred largely on concerns over Chinese financial contributions to Penn during her presidency. The full Democrat-led Senate is expected to approve her appointment to Berlin.

paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

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