Robert Stevens | |||||
Order: | 22nd | ||||
Master of Pembroke College, Oxford | |||||
Term Start: | 1993 | ||||
Term End: | 2001 | ||||
Predecessor: | Roger Bannister | ||||
Successor: | Giles Henderson | ||||
Order1: | 5th | ||||
Title1: | Chancellor of the University of California, Santa Cruz | ||||
Term Start1: | 1987 | ||||
Term End1: | 1991 | ||||
Predecessor1: | Robert Sinsheimer | ||||
Successor1: | Karl Pister | ||||
Order2: | 10th | ||||
Title2: | President of Haverford College | ||||
Term Start2: | 1978 | ||||
Term End2: | 1987 | ||||
Predecessor2: | John Royston Coleman | ||||
Successor2: | Tom G. Kessinger | ||||
Birth Date: | 8 June 1933 | ||||
Death Place: | Oxford | ||||
Nationality: | British | ||||
Relatives: | Robin Stevens (daughter) | ||||
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Robert Bocking Stevens (8 June 1933 – 30 January 2021) was a British lawyer and academic.[1] [2]
Stevens was educated at Oakham School and then at Keble College, Oxford, where he obtained his BA and BCL degrees. He was called to the bar in 1956 as a member of Gray's Inn. In 1958, he was awarded an LLM from Yale University. He then became a member of staff there, rising from assistant professor (1959–61) to associate professor (1961–65) and finally to professor (1965–76). He was then Provost of Tulane University, Louisiana from 1976 to 1978, when he became President of Haverford College, Pennsylvania, leaving there in 1987 to become Chancellor of the University of California, Santa Cruz. He left Santa Cruz in 1991, and in 1993 returned to England to take up office as Master of Pembroke College, Oxford. He was on the governing body of Abingdon School from 1994 to 2001.
He left the college in 2001, and was appointed an Honorary Fellow. Since 2001, he was a senior research fellow at the Constitution Unit of University College London.
His writings include The Restrictive Practices Court (1965), In Search of Justice (1968), Welfare Medicine in America (1974), The American Law School (1983) and The English Judges (2002).[3]
His children with his first wife, Rosemary A. Stevens, are Carey Stevens and Richard Stevens. He was married to Kathie Booth Stevens (born 16 December 1948), a retired educator, art historian, and magistrate, until his death at Oxford in January 2021.[4] Their daughter is the children's novelist Robin Stevens.[5]