Robert Harry MundheimBVO (born February 24, 1933)[3] is an American legal scholar. He is the former Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School, General Counsel of the U.S. Treasury Department, Co-Chairman of the law firm Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson, General Counsel of Salomon, Inc., and Fred Carr Professor of Law and Financial Institutions at the University of Pennsylvania Law School.[4] He was honored by the American Lawyer in 2014 as a "Lifetime Achiever." The University of Pennsylvania Law School has an endowed chair named after him, "the Robert Mundheim Professor of Law."
Mundheim then entered academia, with one stint of simultaneous government service. His first academic posts were brief: visiting professor at Duke Law School in 1964, professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania from 1965 to 1970, and visiting professor at Harvard Law School from 1968 to 1969. During his 1970-80 tenure as Fred Carr Professor of Law and Financial Institutions at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, he became, in 1970, the youngest professor in the law school's history to be named an academic chair[6][8] and served three of those years as general counsel of the U.S. Treasury Department (1977–80).[9][4] In 1980, the University of Pennsylvania Law School named him University Professor of Law and Finance, a position he occupied until 1992.[6] From 1982 to 1989, he was also dean.[9][10]
From 1994-2000, Mundheim remained connected to the University of Pennsylvania Law School through service as a board member and overseer.[12][7] The law school has established an endowed chair in his honor, the Robert Mundheim Professor of Law, currently held by Amy Wax.[13][14] The university awarded him an honorary M.A. in 1971.[6]
Mundheim was awarded the Officer’s Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in 2007.[7] In 2014, in The Monetary System: Analysis and New Approaches to Regulation, authors Jean-François Serval and Jean-Pascal Tranié noted: "This year, Robert Mundheim was honored by the American Lawyer as a 'Lifetime Achiever', which is one of the most recognized distinctions that an American lawyer can get."[19][20] He received a Doctor of Humane Letters degree from The New School in 2019.[21]