University of Virginia professor emerita Mildred Robinson of the School of Law has won an award for helping to improve equity in the UVA community – one that’s close to her heart.
On June 8, she received the Armstead Robinson Faculty Award, named for her late husband. The Black Faculty and Staff Employee Resource Group at UVA bestows the award to a faculty member who has contributed to diversity, equity and inclusion, and who has had a positive impact on the Black experience at the University.
At the same ceremony, Michelle Busby, director of operations for the Department of Engineering Systems and Environment, received the 2021 Lincoln Lewis Staff Award, given to an exceptional staff member who actively and enthusiastically seeks to promote diversity in the UVA community and demonstrates a record of forward-thinking and new ideas.
This year, the employee group presented awards via Zoom due to the pandemic, which canceled last year’s awards process.
Robinson retired this spring.
“It’s hard for me to say anything right now, I’m so choked up,” she said during the ceremony.
Having no idea she was nominated or would even be eligible for the award, “I was just totally stunned,” said Robinson, the first tenured Black woman to serve on the UVA Law faculty, in comments before the ceremony. She was hired in 1985 from Florida State University.
Robinson recently wrapped up a 35-year teaching career at UVA, and 47 years in academia overall, that went beyond just being a tax scholar. During her service, she was a robust citizen of the UVA community, and a dedicated mentor and friend to countless students, faculty and staff.

