Seattle University School of Law Dean Anthony E. Varona has been recognized by The National Jurist as one of the 25 most influential leaders in legal education in the United States. The list, published in the magazine’s new spring issue released this month, celebrates “voices who are moving the field forward and redefining what leadership looks like in a changing landscape,” noting that the featured leaders “sparked new ideas, introduced reforms, inspired their peers, or pushed them to see their work differently.”
Ranking No. 16 overall, Varona also placed No. 9 nationally among American law school deans and is the only individual from the Pacific Northwest named to the list. He is also the only Latinx dean included.
Seattle U Law Distinguished Professor and former Dean Kellye Testy, who is the executive director and CEO of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS), topped the list at No. 1.
This was not Varona’s first time being recognized by The National Jurist. In 2024, the last time the renowned legal education publication published rankings of leaders, he was named one of 20 most influential legal education leaders in the country.
“This honor reflects the extraordinary leadership Dean Varona brings to Seattle University School of Law and to legal education nationally,” said Shane Martin, provost of Seattle University. “Tony is a bold and principled leader whose ideas are shaping the future of the profession. We are proud to see his work recognized at the highest level.”
Asked about the honor, Varona said, “This distinction is a direct reflection of the brilliant work of my phenomenal faculty and staff colleagues, our extraordinary students and alumni, the mission that unites and motivates all of us in shared purpose, and how much we as a law school, and I as a dean, are supported by our superb University leaders. I am beyond lucky to get to lead this outstanding community, especially at this moment in time.”
Throughout his three-decade career in legal education, Varona has achieved a reputation as a tireless and visionary leader with a long track record of trailblazing, innovation, and achievement. He is known for marrying excellence and access, improving the student experience, and promoting the success of faculty and staff colleagues. As a first-generation immigrant himself who has achieved many “firsts,” he is especially recognized as a leader making legal education, and the legal academy, more accessible to students, faculty, and administrators from the broadest diversity of backgrounds, and especially those from underrepresented and marginalized communities.
In July of 2022, Varona became the first Latinx dean of any law school in the Pacific Northwest. He similarly was the first Latinx and first openly gay dean of the University of Miami School of Law, where he served as dean until 2021 (when he was named dean emeritus).
During his time at Seattle University, Varona’s leadership has taken the law school to new heights of national and international distinction. Since his arrival in July 2022, Varona has achieved a long list of accomplishments, including having:
- Led the recruitment of the academically strongest, and most diverse entering 1L classes in the law school’s history.
- Launched new initiatives leveraging the law school’s location and new links to industry-leading corporate partners in Seattle’s global technology hub, such as the innovative Technology, Innovation Law and Ethics Institute.
- Recruited many new nationally and internationally celebrated and sought-after professors, leading the Seattle U Law faculty to be recognized as the #1 most impactful law faculty in the entire Pacific Northwest (in the prominent FLAIR and Sisk Leiter rankings).
- Led the launch of a new SJD (legal PhD) program, and the largest-ever expansion (well over tenfold) of the Seattle U Law graduate international programs.
- Forged new partnerships with prominent universities and law schools around the globe, regularly engaging in international academic diplomacy missions to build two-way cross-border pathways for students and faculty alike.
- Strategically positioned the law school to receive unprecedented new distinctions such as “top 20 most innovative law schools,” #1 law school for public service in the Pacific Northwest, and top national law school honors in legal writing, clinical education, international law, business law, racial justice, criminal law, human rights, and other areas.
- Led significant fundraising achievements to support student success and faculty resources, including a one-of-a-kind pipeline-to-licensure partnership with AccessLex that will reduce students’ overall financial burden and promote their academic and bar success.
- Oversaw the biggest increase in graduate employment rate in the law school’s history, recognized in the Top 25 nationally as an “Employment Leader” by preLaw Magazine.
- Expanded the law school’s civil rights center to include a new cutting-edge Critical Justice Initiative, led by internationally renowned critical justice scholars.
- Co-chaired the Washington State Bar Licensure Task Force (WBLTF), whose recommendations led the Washington Supreme Court to adopt the most comprehensive set of attorney licensure reforms in the nation, balancing the protection of the public with enhancing access to legal services, especially across the large legal desert regions in the state.
- Conceived of and launched the innovative “Hybrid Hubs” initiative, leveraging technology to create vibrant hybrid law school presences in legal desert areas of Washington and Alaska. Varona designed comprehensive partnership agreements with five prominent regional universities, which provide access to affordable legal education, expedited admission and graduation, and ample in-person, in-region resources to local students who ultimately graduate in situ to provide much needed legal services to underserved communities.
- Served as a powerful voice and convener of dialogue urging reform of the U.S. News and World Report annual law school rankings methodology, which disadvantages mission-driven law schools such as those that seek to broaden access for underrepresented students and address access to justice challenges.
- Attracted various recent high-profile national legal education conferences, and secured hosting rights for Seattle U Law for the prestigious National People of Color Legal Scholarship Conference, which takes place every 8- to 10 years. Seattle U Law will serve as the host institution in 2027, becoming the first law school in the Pacific Northwest to host this high-profile gathering which, the last time it took place at American University in Washington DC with Varona as chair of the host/planning committee, attracted over 600 attendees from across the nation and internationally – the largest such gathering of legal scholars of color in U.S. history.
- Developed Seattle U Law's 1L Communities & Commons Program, a year-long program that incorporates structured opportunities for first-year students to feel more at home in law school, collaborate and form a community with their classmates, law school staff, and faculty members.
- Conceived of and oversaw the deployment of a university-wide 3+3 advanced law school admissions pathway, eliminating one full year of time and expense, and expediting the licensure of new attorneys to serve unmet demand for legal services across the private and public sectors.
Additionally, Varona has been a leading and sought-after national voice on the importance of making legal education and the legal academy more diverse. He is the founding co-chair of the Hispanic National Bar Association’s Task Force on Law Faculty and Deans, which identifies and implements new and more effective strategies to increase Hispanic/Latino representation in the legal academy. In September of last year, Varona hosted the 14th Annual Promoting Diversity in Law School Leadership Workshop at Seattle U Law, in partnership with Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law, to encourage and support diversity in law school leadership positions, especially deanships.
Varona is the only law school dean serving on the Administrative Conference of the United States. He also currently is an Elected Life Fellow for the American Bar Foundation, and a member of the Washington Leadership Institute’s Board of Advisors, a Ninth Circuit Merit Screening Committee (for judicial selection), and the Executive Committee of the AALS Section on the Dean/Aspiring Law School Leaders.