Professor Ralph Richard Banks Challenges UC Law SF Students to Understand All Sides of Complex Societal Issues

Ralph Richard Banks joins UC Law SF as the 2025 Wiley Manuel Visiting Scholar and Professor with the Center for Racial and Economic Justice.
- Ralph Richard Banks brings decades of expertise in constitutional law, family law, and racial justice to UC Law SF as this year鈥檚 Wiley Manuel Visiting Scholar and Professor in the Center for Racial and Economic Justice.
- He urges students to examine all sides of an issue, resist ideological extremes, and ground their arguments in facts, fairness, and real-world impact.
- He will teach a spring seminar investigating how higher education intersects with race, class, and the promise of the American Dream.
Ralph Richard Banks has spent his career tackling some of the most complex and emotionally charged issues in American life: race, inequality, family, and education. A longtime professor and acclaimed legal scholar, he sees confronting these topics as an opportunity to train better lawyers鈥攁nd better citizens.
鈥淚 push students to understand the other side,鈥 Banks said. 鈥淭o evaluate arguments from a third-party perspective, dissect claims, and treat them fairly. That鈥檚 what characterizes a good lawyer, no matter what setting you are in.鈥
This year, Banks brings his signature approach to 糖心原创, where he鈥檒l serve as the Wiley Manuel Visiting Scholar and Professor with the Center for Racial and Economic Justice (CREJ). He will lead a spring seminar on race, meritocracy, and education鈥攖opics that are increasingly at the center of national debate.
鈥淧rofessor Banks鈥 scholarship and approach to racial justice are needed now more than ever,鈥 said CREJ Co-Director Shauna Marshall. 鈥淭he UC Law SF community is indeed fortunate to have his expertise on our campus as this nation grapples painfully with concepts of equality and racial justice.鈥
Banks has spent more than 25 years on the Stanford Law School faculty, where he teaches constitutional law, family law, and courses on race and the law. He鈥檚 also the founding director of Stanford鈥檚 Center for Racial Justice and the author of two leading casebooks and the 2011 book, 鈥淚s Marriage for White People? How the African American Marriage Decline Affects Everyone,鈥 exploring how intimate relationships are connected to race and equality.
Banks said he views his areas of expertise as deeply interconnected, describing them as the place where the law meets people鈥檚 lives.
鈥淔amily law regulates people in their most intimate relationships, and issues of race are central to both family law and constitutional law,鈥 he said.
Banks is currently working on a new book, 鈥淭he Big Sort: How College Can Make or Break the American Dream,鈥 set for release in 2026. It asks some hard questions: Has higher education delivered on its promise of opportunity and upward mobility? Why hasn鈥檛 college done more to close racial gaps? And why has it become such a lightning rod in our political culture?
鈥淗igher education is one way people have sought to overcome the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow,鈥 Banks said. 鈥淏ut it hasn鈥檛 been rooted out thus far, so what gives?鈥
His forthcoming seminar at UC Law SF will delve into these questions, inviting students to explore the tensions between merit-based opportunity and efforts to redress inequality. And like all of Banks鈥 teaching, it will resist easy answers.
鈥淚t鈥檚 about approaching issues with open minds and basing your views on facts and data as you explore how these controversies are best resolved,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not to favor or promote the interest of one particular group. The interests we should promote are the interests of society.鈥
Banks cautions against extreme views and rigid thinking on thorny questions, like whether the U.S. is truly a meritocracy, noting that the answer requires nuanced analysis.
鈥淚t鈥檚 important to recognize that America is more of a meritocracy than most other nations, and more than we鈥檝e been in the past. That鈥檚 a source of our greatness,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut we also have serious failings. We are not as meritocratic as we should be.鈥
He wants students to wrestle with those contradictions and think about solutions to society鈥檚 most vexing challenges.
鈥淚f we want to make this nation work, we have to have a system where people feel they have opportunity to lead a good life and have hope for their children,鈥 he said.
Before entering academia, Banks earned his law degree from Harvard, clerked for U.S. District Judge Barrington D. Parker in the Southern District of New York, and practiced law at O鈥橫elveny & Myers. These days, he鈥檚 most energized by the opportunity to exchange ideas with students who bring fresh perspectives and life experiences to the classroom.
鈥淚 hope to introduce students to ideas they鈥檝e wrestled with, or maybe haven鈥檛 thought as deeply about,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut more than that, I want to inspire them to have big dreams, big goals, big ideas, and the confidence to pursue them.鈥
CREJ Co-Director Thalia Gonz谩lez said Banks鈥 presence on campus this year is an opportunity for students and faculty alike to grapple with the complexities of advancing racial and economic justice.
鈥淭he Center for Racial and Economic Justice is thrilled to host Professor Banks as the Wiley Manuel Visiting Scholar and Professor this academic year,鈥 she said. 鈥淗is expertise in race and law, and in particular higher education, will enrich the intellectual life of UC Law SF, provoking critical discourse about equity, opportunity, and democracy.鈥