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William Lahey named King's next President and Vice‑Chancellor

Posted by Communications and Marketing / University of King's College on March 18, 2016 in Community Highlights

William Lahey, Associate Professor at Dalhousie’s Schulich School of Law and former senior public servant, has been appointed next President and Vice-Chancellor of the University of King’s College. Lahey will be the 25th president in King’s 227-year history, succeeding George Cooper, president since 2012. Lahey’s five year term will begin July 1.

The appointment, announced today by Dale Godsoe, Chair of the Board of Governors, was confirmed by unanimous support at a special meeting of the Board of Governors, following the unanimous recommendation of the Presidential Search Committee.

"I am confident that with Bill's commitment to scholarship, public service, and sound administration” said Godsoe, “he will provide outstanding leadership for King’s in the coming years. He values the liberal arts and understands the uniqueness of our interdisciplinary Foundation Year Programme, our innovative School of Journalism, and our important relationship with Dalhousie. We look forward to the journey we will take together.”

Lahey received his undergraduate arts degree from Mount Allison University, followed by degrees in jurisprudence from Oxford University, where he was a Rhodes Scholar, and a Master of Laws from the University of Toronto. 

He is a scholar who works at the boundaries between law and other disciplines: history, political science, public administration, economics, health and environmental sciences. He began his career as clerk for Mr. Justice La Forest of the Supreme Court of Canada, has been Deputy Minister of Nova Scotia’s Department of Environment and Labour, head of the Dalhousie Heath Law Institute, and is frequently called upon to help sort out some of this region’s most difficult and interesting public policy challenges. At his heart, he’s an educator who says that his proudest professional accomplishment is the contribution he has made to the lives of his students.

Read the full announcement at the University of King's College website.