School of Law | Marcus Gadson


From J. Rich Leonard, dean of the Norman A. Wiggins School of Law:

Professor Marcus Gadson is the law school’s recipient of the Dean’s Excellence in Teaching Award for 2022. 

Professor Gadson joined the Campbell Law faculty as a tenure-track professor in 2019. He teaches Civil Procedure to two-thirds of the first-year students-a core doctrinal class that_ every student who earns a Campbell Law degree must master. Professor Gadson also lends his personal and scholarly interests to critical upper-level electives, regularly teaching seminars courses on race, justice and American law and state Constitutional law. 

Professor Gadson is renowned among students for fostering a classroom environment that is compassionate, approachable, and intellectually engaging. He has a special skill for taking  deeply complex material and making it accessible to incoming students who are encountering the law for the first time. Professor Gadson employs a host of teaching tools, resources and formative assessments to foster student success in his classes. His commitment to student learning outcomes, engaging podium style, and genuine care for students are vital qualities that make Professor Gadson a worthy a recipient of the Dean’s Excellence in Teaching Award. 

Professor Gadson’s supportive, engaging teaching style is best described by the students under his :care. His student course evaluations for class preparation, knowledge of the subject  matter, and effective teaching methods are stellar. Professor Gadson’s reputation as an intellectually gifted academic who channels difficult subjects into understandable concepts is reflected by the following comments reprinted from recent evaluations: 

  • “Professor Gadson is brilliant, empathetic, respectful, and helpful beyond anything that is asked of him. He goes above and beyond to not only help us do well in law school, but also to prepare us for the real world. The world needs more professors like Professor Gadson.”
  • “Professor Gadson is a credit to the legal profession and a credit to teaching. Schools would be lucky to, and students would be better for, having more teachers like him.”
  • “Professor Gadson made class entertaining and interesting. He made class enjoyable rather than a chore. Not many teachers can do that.”
  • “Professor Gadson is brilliant yet incredibly humble and kind. I wish I could have him teach all of my classes.”
  • “Professor Gadson is an excellent source of knowledge and articulates difficult concepts with ease. He also helps students learn through engaging in a compassionate and humorous manner.”
  • “He is very intelligent in the subject matter (no pun intended) and really helped me understand some complex ideas.”
  • “A truly enlightened person; a kind professor.”
  • “Gadson is the GOAT!”

The student body has repeatedly recognized the profound impact Professor Gadson has on students pursuing their first-year studies. Beginning in his second full year at Campbell Law, Professor Gadson has been voted 1-L Professor of the Year in consecutive years in 2020, 2021 and 2022. 

Beyond his classroom pedagogy, Professor Gadson is a deeply respected, recognized  scholar whose research focuses on civil procedure and the emerging emphasis on state  constitutional law issues. His publications include: Stolen Plausibility, 110 GEO. L.J. 291 (2021), Time to Reconcile, 43 CAMPBELL L. REV. 223 (2021), Afterword, 69 J. LEGAL EDUC. 708 (2020), Legal Education in the Era of Black Lives Matter, 69 J. LEGAL EDUC. 637 (2020), State  Constitutional Provisions Allowing Juries to Interpret the Law are not as Crazy as they Sound, 93 ST. JOHN’S L. REV. 1 (2019), Constitutionalizing Rehabilitation Did Not Work: Lessons.from Indiana and Oregon and a Way Forward, 54 WILLAMETTE L. REV. 269 (2018), Rethinking Solitary Confinement, CRIM. JUST., Spring 2016, at 1, and Reevaluating the Importance of Civics Education 11- DARTMOUTH L.J. 45 (2013). 

In addition to his heavy teaching load, Professor Gadson serves Campbell Law in a host of ways. Notably, he serves on a multitude of committees, including Academic Appeals,  Curriculum, Academic Standards and Support, Law School Community, Diversity, & Student Life, and Library Committee. Professor Gadson also serves as the Chair of the Judicial Clerkship Task Force Committee. 

Professor Gadson graduated with high honors from Dartmouth College, earning an A.B. in History and a minor in Asian and Middle Eastern studies while being named a James 0.  Freedman Presidential Scholar. He later received his juris doctorate from Havard Law School where he was named an Academic Fellow. At Harvard Law, Professor Gadson served on the Harvard Journal on Legislation and was a member of the Black Law Students’ Association, Harvard Mediation Program, and the AMES Moot Court Competition. 

Professor Gadson began his prestigious legal career as a law clerk to Judge Bernice B. Donald of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Memphis, Tennessee.  From there, he moved into private practice as an associate at one of the country’s leading law firms, Steptoe & Johnson, where he successfully represented clients at both the trial and  appellate level. 

Campbell Law is fortunate to have such an exceptional professor, colleague, and friend who is committed:to the lives and careers of its students.