Professor Jonathan Rose: Scholar, builder, teacher, friend

Jonathan Rose

In the College of Law’s 45-year history, only one professor has a room dedicated to his passion, English Legal History, in the basement of the Ross-Blakley Law Library and is credited with construction of the “fire escape” on the north side of the library. Only one has delivered lectures from Kalamazoo to Oxford and Cambridge and knows both Medieval Latin and Law French.

Just one has his own law school bobblehead: Professor Jonathan Rose.

Rose, who joined the faculty at the behest of founding Dean Willard H. Pedrick, and was a driving force behind the design and construction of the architectural wonder that is the law library, will retire this spring. He has been at the College of Law for 44 years and plans to travel and spend more time on his research and scholarship, as well as teach part-time.

It is fitting that Rose will be honored at the Willard H. Pedrick Society Dinner on March 6, given his close ties with Dean Pedrick, his naming as a Willard H. Pedrick Distinguished Research Scholar in 2001, and his love for and dedication to the law school and its students. Rose is among a handful of professors about whom alumni from all five decades of graduating classes routinely ask. 

Help us create a permanent tribute to Professor Rose, who is retiring in May after 44 years of dedicated service to the College of Law.

Celebrate the culmination of the endowment campaign at the Willard H. Pedrick Society Dinner at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, March 6, 2012, at the Renaissance Phoenix Downtown (formerly Wyndham Phoenix Downtown), 50 E. Adams St.

To share your memories of Professor Rose, obtain more information about the dinner or contribute to the campaign, contact Liz Aiken, Director of Sustained Giving at
liz.aiken@asu.edu or (480) 965-5329.

To give to the Rose Endowment, click here.

Purchase tickets to the dinner here.

A former attorney in the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, Rose arrived at ASU in 1968, and was Associate Dean from 1987-90. He has taught courses in contracts and advanced contracts, antitrust, legal profession, law and economics, regulated industries, consumer protection, legal writing and English legal history to thousands of law students. He is a Faculty Fellow in its Center for Law, Science & Innovation. Rose’s reach extends beyond the walls of the College of Law, as an Affiliate Faculty in the ASU Department of History and in the ASU Arizona Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, and as a member of the Graduate Faculty in the Ph.D. program in History. He is a Senior Fellow of the Administrative Conference of the United States and a member of the Selden Society, Medieval Academy of America and the American Law Institute. Rose also has been active in professional legal activities, University activities and community activities.

"Jon Rose was a wonderful mentor to me," said Alastair J. Gamble (Class of 2007), Labor and Employment Associate at Baker Hostetler in Los Angeles. "He pushed me when I needed to be pushed and softened when I needed a moment to remember why all the work was worth the effort. As a teacher, he is peerless. As a lawyer, he remains the standard by which I judge myself. As a friend, he is kind and generous. I am so fortunate to have known him in all three capacities."

At the dedication of the library in November 1993, Rose was described as "the real force" behind the 11-year library project by its design architect, Mack Scogin, who also described Rose as a "great client, an exacting critic, and a good friend and colleague."

Gordon Campbell (Class of 1972), of Counsel at Parsons Behle & Latimer in Salt Lake City, said he’d never seen such a concentration of intellectual power as had been assembled at the law school. "The one who stood out among the superstars … was the young guy, Jonathan Rose, who was just getting started. Perhaps it was that he was not far from me in age. Maybe it was that he seemed to have such intensity. Most likely it was that, when it came to analytical thinking, he worked hard. And the things he thought, he could defend. He inspired me. On top of that he was a good guy. He cared about us. I will always be grateful."

Rose has collected numerous teaching awards from the ASU Alumni Association, Maricopa County Bar Association and the College of Law Alumni Association, among others. After spending most of his career in antitrust, regulation and legal ethics, Rose changed directions, and now is an international expert in medieval and early modern English Legal History. His research focuses on the history and regulation of the legal profession and the operation of the medieval legal system. Rose is a life member of Clare Hall at the University of Cambridge, where he spends summers researching and lecturing.