SJD Candidate
Thesis title:
Beyond Marrakesh: Copyright Law Barriers to Accessibility for Disabled Persons
Office in Falconer Hall
84 Queen's Park
Toronto, M5S 2C5

Rowan (she/her) is an SJD student at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law with research interests at the intersection of copyright and intellectual property law and human rights. Her LLM thesis considered how Canadian copyright law could better engage with Indigenous conceptions of intellectual property. During her JD program, she published a paper analyzing whether fictional languages such as High Valyrian from Game of Thrones are properly the subject of copyright protection in the United States.

Rowan’s doctoral thesis focuses on eliminating barriers to accessibility for disabled persons under copyright law. She studies disability exceptions to copyright law passed in compliance with the Marrakesh Treaty to Facilitate Access to Published Works for Persons who are Blind, Visually Impaired or Otherwise Print Disabled, and asks whether these exceptions effectively meet the needs of disabled persons. Her research analyzes these exceptions from both a copyright theory perspective and a human rights/anti-discrimination perspective.

Rowan has a JD from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) specializing in Entertainment, Media, and Intellectual Property Law, where she graduated third in her class. She also graduated with distinction from an LLM in Media Law at Queen Mary, University of London. Rowan is called to the bar in both British Columbia and California and has practiced as in-house legal counsel at a social media company with a focus on licensing.

Outside her interest in law, Rowan enjoys highland dancing and playing soccer. She is also a Board Member and the Chair of the Governance Committee at QMUNITY, BC’s Queer, Trans, and Two-Spirit Resource Centre.

Education
LLM specializing in Media Law, Queen Mary University of London, 2019 (with distinction)
JD specializing in Entertainment, Media, and IP Law, UCLA, 2018 (graduated 3rd in class)
BA in Slavic Studies, University of Victoria (graduated with highest GPA in Humanities Faculty)
Awards and Distinctions
Nathan Strauss Q.C. Graduate Fellowship in International Law and Intellectual Property, University of Toronto (2023-2024)
Ontario Graduate Scholarship, University of Toronto (2023-2024)
UCLA Law Leydorf Scholar for research assistance, UCLA School of Law (2018)
Michael T. Masin Scholar for top academic achievement, UCLA School of Law (2016)
Shepard Broad Scholarship for top academic achievement, UCLA School of Law (2016)
Dean’s Merit Scholarship, UCLA School of Law (2015, 2016, 2017)
Jamie Cassels Undergraduate Research Award, University of Victoria (paper topic: LGBTQ+ Rights in Russia and the Sochi Olympics) (2013-2014)
Professional Affiliations
Law Society of British Columbia
State Bar of California
Selected Publications

Rowan Meredith, “Are Fictional Languages Copyrightable?” (April 2022), online: CBA BarTalk <https://www.cbabc.org/BarTalk/Articles/2022/April/Features/Are-Fictional- Languages-Copyrightable>.

Rowan Meredith, “Nuhor Lir Gurenna (I Will Take What Is Mine): The Copyrightability of Fictional Languages” (2018) 2018:6 Entertainment (Droit, Médias, Art & Culture) 420- 40.

Rowan Meredith and Sharon Sutherland, “Dream Queer: Does Fitz Offer Positive Bisexual Representation on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.?” (2017) 15:2 Slayage: The Journal of Whedon Studies.

Research Interests
Equality and Anti-Discrimination Law
Intellectual Property Law
Supervisor
Committee Members