Faculty Profile: Penny White

Penny WhiteUniversity of Tennessee College of Law
Previous Courses Taught (22)
  • In the Shadow of History: Separation of Powers and Tennessee Courts Roundtable
  • Tennessee Justice Programs 2019: Where Do the Rules of Evidence Say That?
  • Tennessee Justice Programs 2019: Significant Recent Cases and Legislation
  • Tennessee Justice Programs 2019: You Still Have to Prove It! The Law of Damages
  • Tennessee Justice Programs: It’s a Privilege: Rule 501’s Impact on Discovery and Trial
  • Tennessee Justice Programs: Significant Recent Cases
  • Tennessee Justice Programs: Damages
  • Justice Program 2017: Significant Recent Cases
  • Justice Program 2017: Lawyer Advertising, Bates at 40
  • Justice Programs 2016: Ethical Challenges to Self-Regulation
  • Justice Program 2016: Emerging Evidence Issues
  • Justice Program 2016: Significant Recent Cases and Legislation
  • Tennessee Supreme Court Academy
  • Justice Programs 2015: Ethics: Striving to be Happy
  • Justice Programs 2015: Evidence Enigma
  • Justice Programs 2015: Significant Recent Case Review
  • Justice Program: Ethics and Professionalism
  • Justice Program: From Complaint Through Trial
  • Justice Program: Significant Recent Cases & Legislation Review
  • Justice Program: Evidence Update and Opinion Testimony
  • Justice Program 2013: Ethics and Professionalism
  • Justice Program 2013: Significant recent Cases and Legislation
Biography

Penny White is the Director of the Center for Advocacy and Dispute Resolution and the Elvin E. Overton Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Tennessee College of Law. She teaches evidence, trial practice, pretrial litigation, negotiations, and interviewing and counseling and lectures around the country at legal and judicial education programs on each of these areas as well as about capital punishment jurisprudence and ethics and professionalism issues.

Before beginning her teaching career, White served as a judge at every level of the court system in Tennessee, serving as the first female Circuit Judge in the First Judicial District and the second woman to serve on the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals and the Tennessee Supreme Court.

While at UT, White has received the university's Jefferson Prize for excellence in research and creative activity and the Alumni Outstanding Teacher Award; at the law school, she has received the Warner Outstanding Teacher Award, the Yarbrough Award for Writing Excellence, and the Carden Awards for Outstanding Achievement in Scholarship and Outstanding Service to the Institution. The National Judicial College, where she teaches regularly, has awarded her the Advancement of Justice Award and the V. Robert Payant Award for Teaching Excellence.

White has published numerous articles on evidence, criminal procedure, and ethics, including her article "Relinquished Responsibilities" which was published in Volume 123 of the Harvard Law Review. She has also co-authored a benchbook for judges on Capital Trials and solely authored a book on the defense of capital cases, for which she was awarded the Ritchie Award by the Tennessee Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.

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