Anastasia Boyko likes to say that she’s Goldilocks-ed her approach by means of her profession. True, it’s been a assorted profession, as she’s tried out completely different roles, however it’s a profession that has taken her full circle, from Yale Legislation Faculty, the place she graduated, after which ultimately again to Yale Legislation to create a program in management for attorneys, and from Salt Lake Metropolis, the place she grew up after she and her mom fled Soviet-era Ukraine, after which again to that metropolis as chief innovation officer on the College of Utah’s S.J. Quinney Faculty of Legislation.
Alongside the best way, Boyko has discovered a factor or two in regards to the roles of management and innovation in authorized schooling, and she or he has sturdy opinions about why legislation colleges ought to do higher at making ready college students to be each leaders and innovators. In at the moment’s LawNext, Boyko joins host Bob Ambrogi to share the journey of her Goldilocks-ed profession and her insights on management and innovation, in addition to ac-cess to justice.
After graduating from Yale Legislation Faculty, Boyko started her profession in personal follow as a tax lawyer. She went on to carry numerous skilled positions, together with legislation librarian, Supreme Court docket intern, banker, yoga trainer, wellness entrepreneur, and profession coach. She returned to Yale Legislation because the inaugural dean of the college’s Tsai Management Program, the place she developed an revolutionary management program for attorneys, and returned to the College of Utah’s legislation faculty, first as director of non-J.D. applications after which as chief innovation officer.
Thank You To Our Sponsors
This episode of LawNext is generously made potential by our sponsors. We admire their help and hope you’ll verify them out.
Should you get pleasure from listening to LawNext, please go away us a overview wherever you hearken to podcasts.