The Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences will step down at the end of the academic year.
Karen Gil, who has been dean since July 2009, will continue teaching in the psychology department, according to a statement from UNC News.
"There is never a best time to leave a job that you love," Gil wrote in an email to College of Arts and Sciences faculty that was partially printed in the UNC News statement.
Gil's decision to step down comes as the University continues to digest the contents of the Wainstein report, which uncovered nearly 20 years of academic misconduct in the former Department of African and Afro-American Studies.
Gil was mentioned in the Wainstein report but never seriously implicated. She was the dean of the college of the former African and Afro-American studies department, but the report said she had no knowledge of the paper class scheme created by secretary Deborah Crowder and chairman Julius Nyang'oro until a meeting after the summer session of 2011.
"We interviewed current Dean Karen Gil (2009 – present) and Holden Thorp (2007-2008) about their knowledge of the paper class scheme and found nothing to suggest that either of these deans or their predecessors were aware of the irregularities within AFAM," the report said.
Gil did call for Nyang'oro's resignation as chairman after a meeting between the former chairman and Jonathan Hartlyn, the current senior associate dean for social sciences and global programs, where the paper classes were revealed to Gil.
The report says Gil then began an internal review, which was conducted by Hartlyn and William Andrews, the current senior associate dean of fine arts and humanities, in 2011.
In the statement from UNC News, Gil said she's leaving to make room for new leadership in the College of Arts and Sciences.