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Graduate Fellowships and Awards

Graduate students at the Faculty of Law can benefit from a wide range of scholarships and awards, granted on the basis of both need and merit. These awards have been established by alumni, legal practitioners, the university, external organizations, and friends of the Faculty, all of whom share a strong belief in the importance of enabling outstanding law students to pursue their research interests.

The Faculty of Law offers generous and competitive financial scholarships to top legal scholars from Canada and around the world.

The Faculty is not able to offer support to all candidates.  Applicants are strongly urged to seek external financial support. Failure to apply for available external awards will be taken into account in award decisions.

Candidates seeking financial assistance should apply early in the application process, and must submit a Financial Assistance Application Form. For this form and further information, see the application instructions pages.

Open Awards

Open awards are available to graduate students studying all areas of law and legal policy. Open awards often have a financial need component.

Faculty of Law Fellowships of up to $15,000 plus academic tuition are made available from the Faculty's endowment to outstanding students in financial need showing high intellectual promise in either the LLM or SJD programme. These fellowships are awarded on the recommendation of the Associate Dean (Graduate Studies).

University of Toronto Fellowships of up to $17,500 are offered by the School of Graduate Studies to doctoral stream graduate students. The Faculty of Law allocates these scholarship funds.

Law Foundation Fellowships are made available from the Law Foundation of Ontario and are awarded in varying amounts to outstanding students showing high intellectual promise in either the LLM or SJD programme.

The WCG Howland Graduate Fellowship, a gift of the late W.C.G. Howland, is a fellowship valued at $10,000 awarded each year to students in either the LLM or SJD programme on the basis of academic promise and financial need.

The Law Alumni Fellowship, totalling $10,000, has been generously made available by the University of Toronto Law Alumni Association, to be awarded in varying amounts to students of outstanding merit in the LLM or SJD programme.

The Houlden & Morawetz Graduate Scholarship is awarded to a graduate student on the basis of financial need and academic excellence. The Insolvency Institute of Canada established the scholarship with the proceeds of the Lloyd W. Houlden festschrift Dinner organised in January 1998. This award honours Justice Lloyd Houlden and Dr. Carl Morawetz and is the graduate complement to the Houlden & Morawetz Bursary, which was established by friends and admirers in 1996. The value per year will be approximately $2,500.

The Albert S. Abel Graduate Award is awarded from on the basis of scholarship and financial need to a graduate student in the Faculty of Law on the recommendation of the Chairman of the Graduate Committee of the Faculty of Law. The award in the amount of $2,500 was established by friends and family of the late Professor Albert S. Abel.

The Raoul Wallenberg Graduate Scholarship, valued at approximately $1000, is the gift of an anonymous donor in recognition of the heroic efforts of the celebrated Swedish diplomat whose humanity and courage saved many thousands of Jewish lives in Hungary during World War II.

The Bernard Chernos Graduate Fellowship in Law is an award established by a gift from Martin Teplitsky, Q.C., '64 and Beverley Chernos in memory of Bernard Chernos, Q.C. '57. The Ministry of Education and Training and the University of Toronto jointly contribute towards the Ontario Graduate Scholarships award of $15,000, tenable at an Ontario University.

Targeted Awards

Targeted awards are open to graduates pursuing research in the specific area of law indentified in the targeted award and/or may be restricted to candidates from identified countries.

Connaught Scholarships are entrance scholarships awarded by the School of Graduate Studies to  international graduate students with outstanding records who are entering a research-oriented graduate degree programme. The Faculty of Law nominates superior applicants. The value of the award is $15,000 plus academic tuition for one academic year.

The Centre for Innovation Law and Policy sponsors a minimum of five Graduate Fellowships in Innovation Law and Policy each year of up to $25,000 each. See the Graduate Fellowships in Innovation Law and Policy web page for more details.

Graduate Scholarships in Reproductive Health Law are designed to permit law graduates from Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, the Caribbean, Asia or Central and Eastern Europe, with a special focus on candidates from Argentina, Chile, Colombia and Peru who have an interest in human rights and women's health in their own countries, to undertake advanced research and study in this emerging field of law. The Scholarships cover tuition and incidental fees, provide a stipend of $15,000 may provide an additional stipend for an internship directly related to their graduate research. This scholarship is open to any graduate student from the targeted countries. For more information, see the Graduate Scholarships in Reproductive Health web page.

The Graduate Scholarships in Women's Rights, provides a scholarship to cover tuition plus up to $15,000  to law graduates from Africa, Central or South America, the Middle East, East or South East Asia who have an interest in human rights of women to undertake advanced research and study in this area of law. For more information, see the Graduate Scholarships in Women's Rights web page.

Health Law and Training Fellowship (CIHR). The Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) will provide graduate fellowships of $17,850 to selected Faculty of Law graduates who are pursuing graduate research and writing in the area of health law and policy. The CIHR training grants provide support for an innovative interdisciplinary program that facilitates interactions between students and faculty in a number of different disciplines at four different institutions (University of Toronto, Université de Sherbrooke, Dalhousie University  and the University of Alberta). In addition to providing  fellowship  funding, the CIHR program supports interdisciplinary seminars at all four institutions, an annual colloquium for graduate students and health law teachers as well as other training opportunities. All graduate applicants interested in the fellowship, must apply directly to the CIHR Training Program in Health Law and Policy, in addition to applying to any or all of the four universities for admission to their graduate program. Click here to learn more about the CIHR Health Law and Policy Fellowships.

Graduate and Post-doctoral Fellowships in Public Health Policy. The CIHR Strategic Training Program in Public Health Policy offers an exciting opportunity to become intellectually and actively involved in the complex tasks demanded by public health policymaking including: policy change; policy analysis; policy assessment; and policy structures and planning. This training program promotes a collaborative multidisciplinary community of researchers, trainees, policymakers, educators and practitioners that works and learns together to address – from a policy perspective – the key issues compromising the public’s health at local, regional, national and global levels.  This CIHR training program is open to students accepted into a graduate program at the University of Toronto, and post doctoral fellows engaged in research at the University of Toronto or an affiliated hospital or research unit.  Funding is available for eligible candidates at CIHR rates. Click here to learn more about the CIHR Strategic Training Program in Public Health Policy.

The Faculty has established the Graduate Fellowships in Capital Markets Research. Fellowships of up to $18,000 will be awarded to students who have demonstrated an interest in the regulation of capital markets, including financial institution regulation, securities regulation and corporate governance.

The Arthur Scace Graduate Fellowship in Tax Law. Established through a gift from The Henry White Kinnear Foundation and named in honour of Arthur Scace, the Fellowships of up to $20,000 will be awarded annually to graduate students studying tax law, on the basis of academic excellence and financial need. Arthur Scace has been with the firm of McCarthy Tétrault for 33 years, and has served as former national chairman and managing partner at the Toronto office.

The Robert Law Fellowship in Legal Ethics, valued at approximately $11,000, is gift from Canadian Tire and Cassels Brock & Blackwell in honour of Robert Law, who was Vice President and General Counsel at Canadian Tire for 43 years and has been associated with the firm Cassels Brock & Blackwell for over 45 years. The fellowship is awarded annually to a graduate student or students undertaking course work or research related to legal ethics and the legal profession. Financial need and academic merit will be considered.

The June Callwood Program in Aboriginal Law was established through an anonymous gift and matching funds from the University of Toronto, and named in honour of journalist, author, and social activist June Callwood. Ronald Rhodes, who was instrumental in the founding of the Women's Television Network, took a leadership role in the creation of the program. Half of the annual funds (approximately $25,000) shall be used for graduate fellowships and undergraduate scholarships for Aboriginal students with demonstrated financial need, with first priority to be given to graduate fellowships. The remaining half of the funds shall be used to support undergraduate community internships in Aboriginal Law.

For more information, visit the June Callwood Program page.

The Nathan Strauss Q.C. Graduate Fellowship in International Law is awarded annually to a student of proven academic excellence enrolled in the LL.M. or S.J.D. programme. Candidates will be expected to indicate the relevance to the Canadian context of their proposed subject of study.

The Nathan Strauss Q.C. Graduate Fellowship in International Law has been established by his wife, Lilly Offenbach Strauss, to commemorate her husband's reputation as a "lawyers' lawyer", and in recognition of his contribution to the practice of law by an  unstinting devotion of  time and effort to the governance of the legal profession in his capacity as  a Life Bencher of the  Law Society of Upper Canada, and by personal example set by the widely admired uncompromising professional standards which characterized his long and distinguished career.  The Fellowship, in the approximate amount of $7,000, consists of annual income from an endowment fund established by Mrs. Strauss and matched by the University.

The Nathan Strauss Q.C. Graduate Fellowship in International Law and Intellectual Property, established by Lilly Offenbach Strauss in memory of her late husband, will be awarded annually to a student of proven academic excellence enrolled in the S.J.D. programme who shows definite promise of completing his/her degree. The thesis subject can focus on any significant past, present or contemplated issue relating to intellectual property and  should include a discussion of its relevance to Canadian society.
 
Admired for combining legal expertise with wise counsel and uncompromising integrity in a distinguished legal career spanning over sixty years, Nathan Strauss was widely known for his contribution to the governance of the legal profession in Ontario, in particular his insistence on professional standards in legal conduct which he exemplified in his private practice and actively promoted in his capacity as a Bencher - later Life Bencher - of the Law  Society of Upper Canada.
 
The Fellowship, in the approximate amount of $ 6,000, consists of annual income from an endowment fund established by Mrs. Strauss, matched by the University of Toronto under the GSEF programme.

The Nathan Strauss Q.C. Graduate Fellowship in Canadian Constitutional Law is awarded annually to a student of proven academic excellence enrolled in the LL.M. or S.J.D. programme who shows promise of completing his/her degree.   The subject of the thesis should be Canadian constitutional law, focusing on any past, present or contemplated issue of significance to Canadian society.

The Fellowship has been established by Lilly Offenbach Strauss to honour the memory of her late husband, Nathan Strauss, a Life Bencher of the Law Society of Upper Canada, frequently acclaimed as a model lawyer, admired for exemplary professional conduct which combined legal expertise with wise counsel and uncompromising insistence on integrity and fairness in legal practice.  The Fellowship, in the approximate amount of $10,000, consists of annual income from an endowment fund established by Mrs. Strauss and matched by the University of Toronto.

The John Stransman Graduate Fellowship in Law and Economics is awarded annually to a graduate student or students working in the area of law and economics on the basis of financial need and academic excellence. The value of the award(s) is approximately $25,000.

The Hon. Mr. Justice Warren K. Winkler Graduate Fellowship in International Human Rights will be awarded annually to one graduate student working in the area of international human rights on the basis of financial need and academic excellence. The value of the award is approximately $6,000.

The Mary and Louis Anisman Fellowship in Law and Fairness. This Fellowship, created in honour of his parents by Philip Anisman, is available to an outstanding student pursuing a master or doctor of laws degree who writes a thesis on an aspect of the relationship between law and fairness, including fairness as a jurisprudential concept, equality as an aspect of fairness in law, fairness in the legal system (such as due process of law, administrative fairness and fairness in the legislative process) and the effect of concepts of fairness on the development and application of specific legal norms by courts and/or legislatures (such as the doctrine of unconscionability in the law of contracts, the oppression remedy in the corporate law, the treatment of minorities or of discrimination), or an analysis of an aspect of law from the perspective of the intersection of law, mortality and firness. The Fellowship, which may be awarded for a period of up to three years, consists of the income earned on the Fellowship Fund in the preceding years and may vary from year to year. In most years the Fellowship will provide approximately $6,000.

The Lucille Norris Graduate Scholarship is a fellowship in the amount of $2,500 donated by Thomas Dunne (1968) in memory of Lucille Norris, awarded to a student undertaking graduate work in the area of medical legal studies.

The Naomi Overend Fellowship in Human Rights, was established by a generous gift from Ellen Anderson, a graduate of the Faculty of Law (LLB 1996, LLM 1998, SJD 2000), in honour of Naomi Overend, a 1985 graduate of the Faculty of Law, for her work in the promotion of human rights. This fellowship of approximately $1,000 is to be awarded annually to a full-time student in the graduate programme with a focus on human rights.

The Delta Kappa Gamma World Fellowship Grant, valued at US $4,000, is for female International Students (not including North America) studying at the University of Toronto. Only female students studying on a student visa are eligible for this award. Furthermore, preference is given to entry-level graduate students. Click here for the application form (Word document).