Sherrilyn Ifill (born December 17, 1962) is an American lawyer and the Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., Esq. Endowed Chair in Civil Rights at Howard University. She is a law professor and former president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.[1] She was the Legal Defense Fund's seventh president since Thurgood Marshall founded the organization in 1940. Ifill is a nationally recognized expert on voting rights and judicial selection.[2] In 2021, Time named her one of the 100 most influential people in the world on its annual Time 100 list.
While in law school, Ifill interned for Judge A. Leon Higginbotham Jr. the first summer and at the United Nations Centre for Human Rights the second summer.[2] Her first job out of law school was a one-year fellowship with the American Civil Liberties Union in New York.[8] She then served as assistant counsel at the NAACP's Legal Defense Fund, litigating Voting Rights Act cases including the landmark Houston Lawyers' Association v. Attorney General of Texas.[8] In 1993, she joined the faculty of the University of Maryland Law School, where she taught for two decades.[9][10] She is the author of On the Courthouse Lawn: Confronting the Legacy of Lynching in the 21st Century,[11][12] a 2008 finalist for the Hurston-Wright Legacy Award for Nonfiction.[13] In 2013, she became the Legal Defense Fund's president and director-counsel.[14] She is the Steven and Maureen Klinsky Visiting Professor of Practice for Leadership and Progress at Harvard Law School, 2023-2024.[15]
Ifill regularly appears in the media for her expertise on topics like affirmative action,[16][17] policing,[18] judicial nominees,[19] and the Supreme Court.[20] Ifill has announced that she will step down from the role of president and director-counsel in the spring of 2022, to be replaced by Janai Nelson, currently the associate director-counsel at LDF.[21] She joined the Ford Foundation as a Senior Fellow in June 2022.[22] Her writing appears in The New York Review of Books, Salon, The Washington Post, and The New York Times.[23][24][25][26][27]
In June 2023, Ifill was appointed Howard Law School's inaugural Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., Esq. Endowed Chair in Civil Rights. In 2024, she will launch the 14th Amendment Center for Law & Democracy.[28][29]
Personal life
Ifill is married to Ivo Knobloch.[4] They have three children.[3]
Honors and awards
In 2016, Ifill won the Society of American Law Teachers Great Teacher Award.[30]
Ifill was an American Academy of Arts and Sciences Fellow in 2019.[31] In 2020, Glamour magazine gave her a Woman of the Year award, calling her a "civil rights superhero."[32] In 2021, Ifill was included on the Time 100, Time's annual list of the 100 most influential people in the world.[33]
She was selected as the New York State Bar Association 2023 Gold Medal Award recipient, which cited her history as a "tireless warrior for civil rights".[34]
^"Closing Statements" (interview with Sherrilyn Ifill). NYU Law Magazine. 2013. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
^Levy, Peter B. "On the Courthouse Lawn: Confronting the Legacy of Lynching in the Twenty-First Century." The Journal of Southern History 75.2 (2009): 474.