Eva Paterson

American activist and lawyer
Eva Paterson
Born
Eva Peterson

(1949-06-16) June 16, 1949 (age 74)
NationalityAmerican
EducationNorthwestern University
University of California, Berkeley, School of Law
Occupation(s)Public Interest Lawyer, Civil Rights Advocate
EmployerEqual Justice Society
TitlePresident, Co-Founder
WebsiteEqual Justice Society

Eva Jefferson Paterson (born 16 June 1949) is the president and founder of the Equal Justice Society, a national legal organization focused on civil rights and anti-discrimination.

Biography

Early life and education

Eva Paterson grew up in a military family in France, England, and Mascoutah, in southern Illinois. In high school, she traveled the state giving Martin Luther King's “I Have a Dream” speech.” She completed her undergraduate studies at Northwestern University, where she was the school's first African American student government president.

As a 20-year-old student leader at a time of turmoil, Paterson was catapulted into the national spotlight when she debated then Vice President Spiro Agnew on live television.[1] Dubbed the “peaceful warrior” for fostering non-violent protest in the aftermath of the 1970 shooting of student demonstrators at Kent State University, she was named one of Mademoiselle's “Ten Young Women of the Year,” featured on the covers of Ebony and Jet, and called to testify before Congress.

Paterson graduated from UC Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law and was admitted to the California State Bar in 1975.[2][3]

Career

After graduating from law school, Paterson worked for the Legal Aid Society of Alameda County and co-founded A Safe Place, a shelter for battered women in Oakland, California.[4]

She then worked at the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights for 23 years, and served as its executive director for 13 years;[5] before founding the Equal Justice Society.

Paterson led the organization's work providing free legal services to low-income individuals, litigating class action civil rights cases, and advocating for social justice. At the Lawyers’ Committee, she was part of a broad coalition that filed the groundbreaking anti-discrimination suit against race and gender discrimination by the San Francisco Fire Department.[6] That lawsuit successfully desegregated the department, winning new opportunities for women and minority firefighters.

Paterson co-founded and chaired the California Coalition for Civil Rights[7] for 18 years, and was a leading spokesperson in the campaigns against Proposition 187 and Proposition 209 and numerous other statewide campaigns against the death penalty, juvenile incarceration and discrimination against lesbians and gay men.

She served as Vice President of the ACLU National Board for eight years, and chaired the boards of Equal Rights Advocates and the San Francisco Bar Association. Paterson has received more than 50 awards, including the Fay Stender Award from the California Women Lawyers, Woman of the Year from the Black Leadership Forum, the Earl Warren Civil Liberties Award from the ACLU of Northern California, and the Alumni Award of Merit from Northwestern University where she received her B.A. in political science.

A self-described beneficiary of affirmative action, Paterson is passionate in support of equal educational opportunities. She co-authored several landmark lawsuits in support of affirmative action: the federal lawsuit challenging California's Proposition 209, the successful litigation against U.C. Berkeley's admissions policy limiting access to students of color and an amicus brief in Grutter v. Bollinger, in which the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the race-conscious admissions policy at the University of Michigan Law School.

Paterson and the Equal Justice Society played a pivotal role in the broad coalition that decisively defeated Ward Connerly's California Proposition 54 (2003). The measure would have banned the collection of racial and ethnic data by any state agency, thus making it virtually impossible to track and document race discrimination or to bring civil rights suits to court. She was a leading spokesperson for the “No on 54″ Campaign.

Paterson has delivered commencement addresses on college campuses across the nation, and she has served as an adjunct professor at the University of San Francisco School of Law and at University of California, Hastings College of the Law.

Paterson received an honorary Doctor of Laws from Northwestern University on June 13, 2022. Paterson graduated in 1971 from Northwestern with a B.A. in political science and was elected the first African American student body president.[8]

References

  1. ^ Eva Paterson Debating Vice President Spiro Agnew on the David Frost show, YouTube
  2. ^ Rodarmor, William (Spring–Summer 2004). "Intertwining Paths of Service" (PDF). Boalt Hall Transcript. p. 20. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-05-17. Retrieved 2009-09-13. In San Francisco, Eva Paterson '75 has fought for civil rights for more than a quarter of a century.
  3. ^ CSBA Records
  4. ^ "Congressional Record, Volume 144 Issue 136 (Friday, October 2, 1998)".
  5. ^ Paterson, Eva. "Eva Paterson". Huffington Post.
  6. ^ "San Francisco Fire Dept. Job Pact Faces Challenge". The New York Times. 1987-11-13.
  7. ^ "Eva Paterson". 12 September 2010.
  8. ^ "Eva Jefferson Paterson '71 to receive honorary Doctor of Laws during commencement". 23 May 2022.

External links

  • San Francisco Bay Guardian : Best of the Bay 2006 : Local Heroes
  • v
  • t
  • e
United States and International Women's Halls of Fame
US NationalStates
US Territories
  • American Samoa
  • Guam
  • Northern Mariana Islands
  • Puerto Rico
  • Virgin Islands
County-Region
City-TownMisc United States
International
  • v
  • t
  • e
Alameda County (California) Women's Hall of Fame
A
B
  • Madi Bacon
  • Sally Joan Baker
  • Yolanda Baldovinos
  • Priscilla Banks
  • Suzanne Barba
  • Kathie Barkow
  • Ophelia Basgal
  • Hilary Bass
  • Minnie Bateman
  • Alta Bates
  • Suzan Bateson
  • Amanda Berger
  • Barbara Bernstein
  • Veronica Ventura Bitz
  • Jean Bjork
  • Marcia Blackstock
  • Julia Madison Blackwell
  • Carolyn Bloede
  • Arlene Blum
  • Viola Blythe
  • Gina Bonanno
  • Peggy Bristol
  • Diamond Broussard
  • Carol Brown (Alameda County)
  • Carole Brown
  • Oral Lee Brown
  • Esther Brown Mabry
  • Thi Bui
  • Lisa Busbee-Young
C
  • Linda Campana
  • Sallie T. Carey
  • Cynthia Carey-Grant
  • Boona Cheema
  • Jacqueline Chen
  • Mary Cheng
  • Eva Clark (Alameda)
  • Aeeshah Clottey
  • June A. Cook
  • Susan A. Cota
  • Stephanie Couch
  • Brenda J. Crawford
  • Dona Crawford
  • Gigi Crowder
  • Sarah Crowell
  • Valeria Cruz
  • Nicole Curran
D
  • Helen Daniel
  • Sade Daniels
  • Rory Darrah
  • Margot Dashiell
  • Bonnie Davis (author)
  • Freddye M. Davis
  • Deborah DeAngelis
  • Elaine DeColigny
  • Quinn Delaney
  • Lois De Domenico
  • Alice V. Deng
  • Rebecca Denison
  • Margaret Dixon
  • Sue Doro
  • Pamm Drake
  • Norlen E. Drossel
  • Catherine (Suárez) Dunbar
  • Helen Jane Duvall
E-F
  • Jenny Fang
  • Leora Feeney
  • Sandy Ferreira (environmentalist)
  • Jean Ficklin
  • Halie Fitzwater-Williams
  • Deborah Ale Flint
  • Aloysia Rochon Fouché
  • Reign Free
  • Peggy Fulton Hora
G
  • Jane C. Garcia
  • Carolyn Getridge
  • Minnie Gibson
  • Judy Goff
  • Ruthe P. Gomez
  • Gilda Gonzales
  • Margaret Gordon (public health)
  • Dorothy Graham (health)
  • Gloria Grant-Wilson
  • Gladys Green
  • G. G. Greenhouse
  • Mary Jane Gross, RN, MN
  • Erin Nikole Gums
  • Katherine Dunphy Guzman
H-I
  • Jacqueline Hairston
  • Arooj Haq
  • Cynthia Harris (educator)
  • LaDonna Harris (law enforcement)
  • Carol Henie
  • Lizbeth Hernandez
  • Maria G. Hernandez
  • Diana Herron
  • Sherry Higgs
  • Sherry M. Hirota
  • Mildred Howard
  • Sherry Hu
  • SiLin Huang
  • Susan Hubbard, Ph.D.
  • Wei-Ling Huber
  • Pam Hullinger
  • Gail D. Hunter
  • Hope Ishii
J
  • Mary Jackson ( Community Service)
  • Regina Jackson
  • Crystal Jaing
  • Frances Jefferson
  • Tammy Jernigan
  • Sylvia J. Johnson
  • Teri Johnson
  • Loren Jones (Helen)
  • Sharon Richardson Jones
  • Victoria Jones (business)
  • Natassija Jordan-Oliver
  • Farmaan Judge
K
  • Nazineen Kandahari
  • Marylia Kelley
  • Carol Kotewicz-Dencker
  • Emily Kirsch
  • Tina Krietz
  • Jennifer Krill
  • Kathy Kuhner
  • Nicole Kyauk
L
  • Hillary Larkin
  • Jocelyn D. Larkin
  • Kimberly Larson
  • Nancy K. D. Lemon
  • Audrey A. LePell
  • Linda Levitsky
  • Joan Tarika Lewis
  • Janet A. Liang
  • Ethel Long-Scott
  • Vanessa Hanley Lordi
  • Ruth B. Love
  • Henriette M. Leclerc Lovett
  • Lisa Ludden
  • Taylor Marie Lyons
M
  • Erica Mackie
  • Connie Galambos Malloy
  • Linda Mandolini
  • Sonia B. Manjon
  • Shirley Manly-Lampkin
  • Arabella Martinez
  • Elizabeth Lloyd Mayer
  • Claire Ellen Max
  • Michelle Smith McDonald
  • Teri McKeever
  • Tricia McMahon
  • Hope A. Michelsen
  • Barbara Millican Montgomery
  • Rashima Mogha
  • Corinne Mohrmann
  • Susan Muscarella
N-O
  • Spojmie Nasiri
  • Connie L. Nelson
  • Shirley Nelson (banker)
  • Lauryn Nguyen
  • Ayodele Nzinga
  • Irene Obera
  • Sylvia M. Oberti
  • Mildred Oliver
  • Donna Olsen
  • Nancy E. O'Malley
  • Susan Opp
  • Fleurdeliz Orjalo
  • Trina Ostrander
  • Casey Oto
P-Q
  • Eva Paterson
  • Peggy Peabody (ballet)
  • Carla Perez (environmentalist)
  • Roxana Perez
  • Ann Petru
  • Lisa W. Piatetsky
  • Sandra Pitts-Johnson
  • Rona Popal
  • Lisa A. Poyneer
  • Debra Pryor
  • Gayle Quinn
R
  • Ellen Raber
  • Jerry Raber
  • Majeedah Rahman
  • Tina Raine-Bennett
  • Barbara Ramsey
  • Bernida Mary Reagan
  • Sonjia Parker Redmond
  • Norma S. Rees
  • Julie Rems-Smario
  • Kristin Groos Richmond
  • Favianna Rodriguez
  • Sylvia Rosales-Fike
  • Carolyn Russell (community service)
S
  • Rita Sahai
  • Peggy Saika
  • Laura Savio
  • Hel Say
  • Wendy Schlesinger
  • Nancy Schluntz
  • Mona Vaughn Scott
  • Shonda Scott
  • Leilani Shaffer
  • Liisa Pine Schoonmaker
  • Moina Shaiq
  • Kemba Shakur
  • Dawn Shaughnessy
  • Suzanne Shenfil
  • Winda I. Shimizu
  • Fatemeh Shirazi
  • Charlene Sigman
  • Michele Raymond Silsdorf
  • Bobbi Silten
  • Olis Simmons
  • Sonya L. Smallets
  • Loyola Maynard Smith
  • Judith Smith (Alameda County)
  • Wendy Sommer
  • Nancy Steele (education)
  • Darla Stevens
T
  • Elaine Taylor (environmentalist)
  • Nicole Taylor (philanthropist)
  • Marye L. Thomas
  • Candi Thornton-McCreary
  • Sandra J. Threlfall
  • Stephanie Tietbohl
  • Robin E. Toussaint
  • Arthurlene G. Towner
  • Margaret Tracy (environmentalist)
  • Sandy Turner (health care)
U-V
  • Agnes Ubalde
  • Deborah Vaughan
W
  • Jennifer Lynn Walker
  • Helen Waukazoo
  • Pauline A. Weaver
  • Elñora T. Webb
  • Cecilia Weed
  • Ilene Weinreb
  • Bonnie Wheatley
  • Akemi Williams
  • Niculia Williams
  • Colette Winlock
  • Alba Witkin
  • Kristina Wolf
  • Rhonda Wood (wine maker)
  • Vanessa Woodmansee
  • Mary Ann Wright
  • Nancy Wu (California)
X-Z
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • VIAF
  • WorldCat
National
  • United States