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David W. Burcham

David W. Burcham
President David Burcham official portrait art Loyola Marymount University by Scott Johnston.jpg
President David W. Burcham's official portrait for Loyola Marymount University was painted by Scott Wallace Johnston
15th President of
Loyola Marymount University
In office
October 4, 2010 – May 31, 2015
Preceded by Robert B. Lawton, S.J.
Succeeded by Timothy Law Snyder
Interim President of
Loyola Marymount University
In office
May 31, 2010 – October 4, 2010
Preceded by Robert B. Lawton, S.J.
Personal details
Born 1951 (age 66–67)
California, United States
Residence Los Angeles
Alma mater Occidental College
Cal State Long Beach
Loyola Law School
Website http://www.lmu.edu/about/president.htm

David W. Burcham (born 1951) is an American constitutional law scholar, professor and former university administrator. He was the 15th president of Loyola Marymount University, serving from October 4, 2010 to May 31, 2015. He is a 1984 graduate of Loyola Law School, and was both the first lay president and the first non-Catholic president in the university’s history.

Burcham earned a B.A. in political science from Occidental College in 1973, and a M.A. in education administration from Cal State Long Beach in 1978. He graduated first in his class from Loyola Law School, and clerked at the U.S. Supreme Court for Justice Byron White (1986–87) and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit for Chief Judge Ruggero J. Aldisert (1984–86). He was later in private practice at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher (1987–91).

After seven years in public and private practice, he returned to Loyola Law School to teach. He was appointed senior vice president of LMU and dean of the law school in 2000. During his tenure as dean of Loyola Law School, Burcham forged strategic improvements in the curriculum. He oversaw a host of innovative programs, including the Business Law Practicum, the Center for Juvenile Law & Policy, the Legal Masters Program (LLM) in International Legal Practice, the London IP Institute, and the Tax LLM program. Practical training programs became a hallmark of the curriculum under Burcham’s stewardship. The Byrne Trial Advocacy Team won five national championships during his deanship and he oversaw the creation of the National Civil Trial Competition, one of the country’s preeminent mock trial events.

Burcham enhanced the size and prestige of the faculty, increasing the number of full-time law professors by almost 15 percent. He also worked with faculty to establish programs in their core areas of expertise, including the Center for the Study of Law & Genocide, the Civil Justice Program, the Distinguished William J. Landers Lecture on Prosecutorial Ethics, the Fidler Institute on Criminal Justice, the Intellectual Property Special Focus Series, the Journalist Law School and the Sports Law Institute. Burcham also strengthened the law school’s financial foundation. He raised money to establish seven new faculty chairs, as well as paying for and completing the Girardi Advocacy Center and its flagship classroom, the Robinson Courtroom. With that accomplished, he instituted a building moratorium to focus on the school’s endowment, which more than doubled under his watch.


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