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Friday, November 8, 2024

Campbell University: Five Campbell Law students earn first Stubbs Bankruptcy Fellowships

Announcement

Announcement | Pexels by Markus Winkler

Announcement | Pexels by Markus Winkler

A dearth of young attorneys choosing bankruptcy law is the impetus behind Campbell Law School’s new Stubbs Bankruptcy Fellowships, says Dean J. Rich Leonard, a former U.S. Bankruptcy judge.

“A few years ago a group of us were talking about how worried we were that there were not enough young lawyers going into bankruptcy law,” Leonard explained.

So he asked the law school’s Stubbs Bankruptcy Law Clinic namesake Trawick Stubbs, the patriarch of the bankruptcy bar in North Carolina and the senior partner in Stubbs Perdue, if he would be willing to sponsor a unique scholarship to encourage law students to take at least three bankruptcy courses.

“We have a vibrant bankruptcy curriculum here at the law school, with the introductory Bankruptcy course, the Stubbs Bankruptcy Clinic and the Corporate Reorganization course,” Leonard wrote in an email to students. “Disappointingly, registration had dwindled in these courses and the bankruptcy bar, particularly in Eastern North Carolina, looks to our school to provide skilled practitioners in this area of practice.”

Thanks to Stubbs generous donation, five law students earned the Stubbs Bankruptcy Fellowships of $3,000 each this week after completing all three courses, including the Clinic taught by Director Ciara Rogers of Oliver and Cheek: Jack Ayers ‘24, Kylie Bouplon ‘23, Kyle Conway ‘23, William Godwin ‘23 and Adriel Parks ‘23. 

“My hope is to continue to find generous donors who will help fund the Bankruptcy Fellowships for current students for years to come,” Leonard added.

Original source can be found here. 

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