Headnotes - Jan 14 2019

Announcements

Deans' Offices

Faculty Council, Wednesday, January 16, 2019

12.30 p.m. – 2.00 p.m. - Solarium

All students are welcome to attend meetings of the law school’s faculty council . Materials are available for viewing beforehand on the Faculty of Law website. Please log-on to e-legal, click on My Resources, then Faculty Council.  Please note: seating at the table is reserved for Faculty Council members only.

Yak’s Snacks, Mon, Jan 14

Please join Dean Ed Iacobucci at “Yak’s Snacks”.
Location: Jackman Atrium
Time:  10 – 11 a.m.
Please BRING YOUR OWN MUG

Factum Writing Session

This factum writing session is intended to help mooters working on their facta, but anyone with an interest is welcome to attend!  Please join us in J140 from 12:30 to 2:00 pm on Thursday, January 17.

Date of event:
Thu. Jan. 17, 2019, 12:30pm
Location:
J140
Lawyers Doing Cool Things - Matt Mundy J.D. 2012

Lawyers Doing Cool Things - Matt Mundy, J.D. 2012

Matt joined Canopy Rivers (cannabis company) in May 2018 as General Counsel. Prior to joining Canopy Rivers, Matt was an associate at Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP (Blakes), where he was an active member of the Blakes Cannabis group and regularly wrote and spoke on the latest developments in the industry.

Monday January 14th, 12:30 – 2:00

Sandwiches and water will be available

To register, click here

Date of event:
Mon. Jan. 14, 2019, 12:30pm
Event conditions:
Registration required
The Future of Law: Key trends shaping the legal profession

The Future of Law: Key trends shaping the legal profession

January 15, 12:30 - 2:00

Featuring Faculty of Law professor Gillian Hadfield, a leading scholar on this topic, this session will focus on the forces that are transforming the legal profession and legal services.

 Topics covered will include: 

  • How artificial intelligence and globalization are reshaping the market for legal services
  • How technology and other disruptive approaches are creating new opportunities in the delivery of legal services
  • The challenges to the “big law” paradigm
  • The impact of alternative business structures
  • Access to justice and the promise of technology
  • The changing skill set required to be a successful lawyer

This is the first in a series of “Future of Law” workshops. Upcoming sessions will focus on AI and its impact on the law and legal services, and the ways in which big law firms are attempting to adapt to the rapidly changing nature of client expectations and the structure of legal services.

To register, click here.

 

Date of event:
Tue. Jan. 15, 2019, 12:30pm
Event conditions:
Registration required
Rotman@Law Certificate, reminder

Dear students:

 

Welcome back - I hope 2019 is off to a promising start.  I am writing to remind you of the opportunity to participate in Rotman@Law, an exciting collaboration between the Faculty of Law and the Rotman School of Management.

 

Rotman@Law gives you access to Rotman’s superb pre-MBA online courses covering the fundamentals of accounting, finance, and statistics. In talking to our alumni inside and outside legal practice, they have often said that they wished they’d had more exposure to these topics before graduating. Some knowledge and fluency in these areas is valuable across a wide range of legal practice, in everything from commercial law to family law to tort law (especially in the calculation of damages).  These subjects are also valuable for a lawyer managing a practice of any description, or for a lawyer acting as in-house counsel.  Rotman@Law allows you to build your knowledge, business fluency and skill-set before you enter the profession and start advising clients.

 

Students who successfully complete all three courses will receive a Rotman@Law certificate of completion. Upper year students are eligible to participate right away; 1L students will be given access after the academic year concludes in May 2018. We have arranged for 3L students to have up until August 31st 2019  to complete the certificate.

 

Rotman@Law is a co-curricular opportunity offered by the Faculty through our Leadership Skills Program (LSP). The LSP is a growing suite of workshops and other opportunities designed to assist law students to develop valuable professional skills before graduating law school. If you haven’t already done so, you can check out our upcoming Leadership Skills workshops here.

 

For more information about Rotman@Law courses, the certificate, and how to enrol, please go here.

 

I hope that many of you take advantage of this opportunity!

 

Best,

Ed

 

Edward Iacobucci

Dean and James M. Tory Professor of Law

Future of Law Initiative

Dear students

 

I am very excited to let you know about several new academic and co-curricular opportunities that focus on the theme of law and technology, innovation and entrepreneurship. Grouped under the heading “Future of Law”, this growing cluster of activities includes:

 

Future of Law workshop series:  On Tuesday January 15 at 12:30 – 2:00, Professor Gillian Hadfield will kick off our Future of Law workshop series with her session called “Future of Law: Key trends shaping the legal profession”. Professor Hadfield is an internationally recognized expert in law and technology, and author of Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent it for a Complex Global Economy. To register for the session, click here.

 

And on Tuesday February 26 at 12:30 – 2:00, Professor Ben Alarie will host a workshop called “Future of Law: AI, machine-learning and you” which will focus on how machine-learning is establishing a new baseline for professional competence. Professor Alarie is co-founder and CEO of Blue J Legal, a U of T start-up company creating next generation legal research tools that harness machine-learning and artificial intelligence to set a new professional standard for legal research. To register for the session, please click here.

 

Summer internships:

 

Future of Law - Blue J Legal Fellowship:  This new summer fellowship awards two fellowships to a pair of students working as a team on developing a proposal for a start-up business, ideally, but not necessarily, involving law and innovation. In addition to developing a business plan, the students will spend half of the fellowship working at Blue J Legal. For more information about the fellowship and how to apply, please click here.

 

Faculty of Engineering Hatchery summer internship:  The law school is partnering with the Faculty of Engineering to offer to two paid summer positions with the Hatchery NEST 2018 Summer Cohort process.  The Hatchery Nest is the Faculty of Engineering’s student entrepreneur incubator. As members of an advisory board, law students work with MBA and Masters of Innovation students to provide project management and administrative guidance to assist Engineering student teams to successfully develop their ideas and business model and ultimately secure a spot at the Hatchery’s Demo Day. For more information about the internships and how to apply, click here.

 

Future of Law innovation externships: The law school is currently in discussions with several potential partners to develop a series of clinical externships in which students will work under the supervision of lawyers to provide legal advice to start-up companies. These for-credit opportunities will become available in September 2019 and will be included in course selection in the summer.

 

We will look forward to updating you as we continue to add new features to our Future of Law cluster of opportunities. If you have questions, please get in touch with Assistant Dean Archbold at alexis.archbold@utoronto.ca

 

Best

Ed

 

Edward Iacobucci

Dean and James M. Tory Professor of Law

UTQAP Provostial Review - JD Student Consultation

Dean Ed Iacobucci will be holding this session to discuss the University’s Quality Assurance Process - a cyclical review, which we are participating in this year, that ensures that provincial quality standards are being met (more information available here).  As part of UTQAP, we will be drafting a Self Study document, for which your input is welcome.  All JD student are invited to join.  (Graduate students will be participating in a separate consultation.)

 

Date of event:
Tue. Jan. 22, 2019, 1:00am
Location:
J140
Lawyers Doing Cool Things - Peter Nguyen, J.D. 2000

Lawyers Doing Cool Things - Peter Nguyen, J.D. 2000

Peter Nguyen is hosting a Lawyers Doing Cool Things lunch on Thursday January 24th, 12:30 – 2:00.

Peter is the General Counsel, Corporate Secretary and Privacy Officer at Resolver Inc., an integrated risk management software company. He is a member of the executive management team responsible for managing and providing legal advice on a global basis, including commercial, corporate, corporate finance, corporate governance, employment, litigation and M & A issues.

Peter is a regular speaker on the topics of cloud computing, cybersecurity, risk management, innovation and the relationship between in-house and external counsel.

To register, click here.

Date of event:
Thu. Jan. 24, 2019, 12:30pm
Event conditions:
Registration required

Student Office

safeTALK Workshop

SafeTALK Workshop

Join students, staff and faculty for a safeTALK workshop. Become a suicide-alert helper! Next workshop Friday, January 18th 1:00pm-4:00pm in J125.

More information about safeTALK is available through the LivingWorks website: https://www.livingworks.net/programs/safetalk/

Please contact Yukimi Henry for details at yukimi.henry@utoronto.ca. Registration is required: https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/safetalk-at-uoft-law-tickets-51948558537

If you cannot make the January workshop other trainings are available on February 8th and March 15th.

Date of event:
Fri. Jan. 18, 2019, 1:00am
Location:
Jackman 125
Event conditions:
Registration Required
Student Health & Wellness Committee Meeting

Come join your fellow students to get involved in health & wellness projects and events around the law school!

Planning for a Health & Wellness Week, fitness events and peer mental health supports are all on the agenda. Lunch will be provided.

Next meeting: Wednesday, January 23rd, 12:30-2pm, J225

For more information contact Yukimi Henry, yukimi.henry@utoronto.ca, or Sara Marni Hubbard, sara.hubbard@uotoronto.ca.

 

Date of event:
Wed. Jan. 23, 2019, 12:30pm
Location:
J225
Mature Students and Students with Children Lunch

Mature Student and Students with Children Lunch

January 28th, 12:30-2pm in the Betty Ho Classroom.

All mature students and students with children and invited to a casual lunch with Assistant Dean Alexis Archbold and fellow students to eat, chat, and connect.

RSVP to: sara.hubbard@utoronto.ca

Reminder: Grad Photos

Dear students graduating in June 2019,

 

I am writing to provide information about graduation photos.

 

In order to have your photo on the class composite, you need to sit for a portrait photo session taken by New Paramount Studios. The studio will choose the photo that will appear on the composite. Photos taken by other studios will not appear on the composite. Sittings at the law school will take place on the dates listed below or you can visit one of the New Paramount Studios by April 14th, 2019. Please follow the instructions below to book an appointment. Sittings cost $20.00 and are paid by you directly to New Paramount Studios. 

 

Sittings at the Jackman Law Building in J305 will take place on the following dates: March 14th- 15th and 18th-19th.

  

What is included in your $20.00 sit fee.

Graduate composite (handed out at convocation)

Green screen, variety of unique backgrounds

On line proofs, booking and ordering

Variety of poses, including posing with your friends.

  

Instructions on booking an appointment for a portrait session at the Faculty of Law.

 

1. www.newparamount.com 

 

2. Click “book” at the top of the page.

 

3. Click on “University/College Graduation.”

 

4. Click, “Register as a new user” and receive temporary password.

 

5. Log in with your new user name and password.

 

6. Click on “schedule” and find UT Faculty of Law

 

7. Select a date and book a time (only November dates are available for booking right now.)

 

8. Book an available time

 

Graduates must book an appointment at least 12 hours before the requested time.

 

If you have any questions please email nps@look.ca or call 416-653-5103

--

Sara-Marni Hubbard, Doctoral Student

Student Programs Coordinator

Faculty of Law, University of Toronto

Academic Events

Wright Lecture: "Institutions for Protecting Constitutional Democracy" by Mark Tushnet
Mark Tushnet

This year's Wright Lecture will be delivered by Mark Tushnet.  The lecture is titled, “Institutions for Protecting Constitutional Democracy: Some Conceptual Preliminaries” and will be delivered on Tuesday, January 22, starting at 4:10 pm in Jackman 140.  Please join us for this exciting academic event. 

 

Law and Economics Workshop: Sarath Sanga

LAW & ECONOMICS COLLOQUIUM

presents

Sarath Sanga
Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law

Network Effects in Corporate Governance

Tuesday, January 15, 2019
4:10 - 5:45
Room FL219 (John Willis Classroom)
78 Queen's Park

Most public companies incorporate in Delaware. Is this because they prefer its legal system or are they simply following a trend? Using the incorporation histories of over 22,000 public companies from 1930 to 2010, I show that firms are more influenced by
changes in each other’s decisions than by changes in the law. The analysis exploits an unexpected legal shock that increased Delaware’s long-run share from 30 to 74 percent. I attribute most of this change to a cascading effect in which the decisions of past firms successively influence future cohorts. Delaware firms also enjoyed abnormal returns precisely during those years in which the Delaware network grew most.

 

For more workshop information, please send an email to events.law@utoronto.ca 

Date of event:
Tue. Jan. 15, 2019, 4:00pm
Location:
Room FL219 (John Willis Classroom)
Expert Witness Colloquium
Expert Witness Colloquium

The Forensic Science Group will be hosting the first annual Expert Witness Colloquium on Friday, February 8, 2019 (from 9AM - 2PM), where leading expert witnesses and lawyers will present case studies on the three most common areas of forensic science investigation in litigation: collision reconstruction, digital forensics and product liability. The Expert Witness Colloquium will be presented with valuable guidance from the University of Toronto Department of Materials Science and Engineering.  Please register for the event using the link below:

https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/expert-witness-colloquium-tickets-54219792860?fbclid=IwAR1uNtQRVIYFKclHjZylFVA3MMrWwOj79J9xUZuDNEPV_XGtYfbXffJmy-E

Date of event:
Fri. Feb. 8, 2019, 9:00am
Location:
Jackman Hall (Room # TBD)
Event conditions:
Registration required.
China Law Conference

The emergence of the People’s Republic of China as a political and economic force has in the last two decades profoundly affected the global landscape confronting politicians, economic actors, social actors and scholars. In light of this, the China Law Group is hosting its Sixth Annual China Law Conference on Saturday, February 2, 2019 at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law to discuss the impact these changes have on law.

The conference will feature panels on the South China Sea Dispute, Trade and "One Belt One Road" Initiative, and Human Rights and Ethnic Minorities of China. Speakers for the SCS panel are: Elizabeth Riddell-Dixon (University of Toronto), Ted McDorman (University of Victoria), Chris Chung (University of Toronto), and Nong Hong (Institute for China-America Studies). Speakers for the Trade panel are: Thomas S. Axworthy (Massey College), Gil Lan (Ryerson University), Julia Qin (Wayne State University), and Cyndee Todgham Cherniak (LexSage). Speakers for the Human Rights panel are: Alvin Y.H. Cheung (New York University), Masashi Crete-Nishihata (Citizen Lab), Mehmet Tohti (Canadian Uyghur Association), and Louisa Greve (Uyghur Human Rights Project). 

Students and faculty from all departments of the University will be welcome, as well as the general public.

Full conference details and registration are available at chinalawconference.ca 

Date of event:
Sat. Feb. 2, 2019, 9:00am
Location:
J140, Faculty of Law
Event conditions:
Register on website
January 23 Constitutional Roundtable with Professor Mark Tushnet

Visiting Professor Mark Tushnet (who is giving the annual Wright lecture this year), will present an Asper Centre Constitutional Roundtable on “Interpreting Unwritten Constitutional Norms: Court-Packing in the United States as a Case Study,” with University of Toronto Faculty of Law Professor Yasmin Dawood as discussant.  This Roundtable is based on a chapter of Professor Tushnet’s forthcoming book. 

More information here

12:30PM-2PM in J130.

No registration required. Lunch will be provided. 

Any questions? Email Tal Schreier: tal.schreier@utoronto.ca

Date of event:
Wed. Jan. 23, 2019, 12:30pm
Location:
J130
Osgoode Society Legal History Workshop

OSGOODE SOCIETY LEGAL HISTORY WORKSHOP, 2018-2019

WINTER TERM SCHEDULE

All Sessions begin at 6.30. Seminar Room FA3, Falconer Hall, Faculty of Law

All students welcome. To be included on the email list and receive the papers please email j.phillips@utoronto.ca

Wednesday January 16: Nicholas Rogers, York University: 'Murder on the Middle Passage: The trial of Captain Kimber 1792.'

Wednesday January 30: Philip Girard, Osgoode Hall Law School: ‘American Influences, Canadian Realities: The Rise and Fall of the Harvard Law Model in Canadian Legal Education’.

 Wednesday February 13: Jackson Tait, Osgoode Hall Law School: 'In Search of the Lex Mercatoria:  Canadian Legal Interpretation of Atlantic Marine Insurance Contracts, 1860 - 1924'

 Wednesday February 27: Eric Reiter, Concordia University: ‘Robinson v. CPR (1882-92):  Law, Society and Wrongful Death in Quebec’  [tentative title]

 Wednesday March 13: Mark Walters, McGill Law School: ‘The Quebec Act and the Covenant Chain: How Crown-Indigenous Treaty Relationships Shaped Imperial Constitutional Design.’

Wednesday March 27: Colin Grittner, University of British Columbia: ‘Elective Legislative Councils and the Privileges of Property across Mid-Nineteenth-Century British North America’

 Wednesday April 3: Patricia McMahon, Tory’s: TBA

 

 

Osgoode Society Legal History Workshop January 16

Osgoode Society Legal History Workshop

Wednesday January 16, 6.30, FA3, Falconer Hall

Professor Nicholas Rogers, York University:

'Murder on the Middle Passage: The trial of Captain Kimber 1792.'

For a copy of the paper please contact j.phillips@utoronto.ca

Student Activities

iTrek Israel Trip

Come to Israel with your fellow U of T Law students on iTrek!

iTrek is a 7 day trip to Israel from April 27th – May 4th open to all U of T Law students. Over the course of the trip we will explore Israel’s cultural landscape, legal environment, nightlife, high-tech industry, history, and politics. Join your fellow law students for this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity! All costs are covered except your flight/travel insurance + a $350 USD participation fee.

Due to the overwhelming success of the trip last year, we are expanding and are now looking for 30-35 participants. Applications are due February 1st. 

To apply, please fill out the following form: https://goo.gl/forms/QJ6nIuOheC0ifzrf2

Join us at our info session to learn more:

Date: Monday, Jan. 14th
Time: 12:30 – 1:30pm 
Location: TBD

 

 
Recruiter Tell All Event Hosted by the JLSA

The JLSA invites you to learn ALL THE SECRETS and ask ALL YOUR QUESTIONS about recruitment. Sara Lefton, the former Assistant Director of Professional Development and Student Programs at Dentons, will run through the recruitment process and answer ANY questions about it. 1Ls planning to do the 2L recruit in the fall and 2Ls planning to do the articling recruit in the summer are welcome to come gain helpful insights on the recruitment process from a former recruiter.

Date of event:
Thu. Jan. 17, 2019, 12:30pm
Location:
J125
Public Interest Gathering

Did you come to law school to make the world a better place?

Us too!

Come join us for U of T Law's third public interest gathering. You'll get to meet like-minded people over food, and hear about the great events coming up this semester from U of T's public interest law clubs.

https://www.facebook.com/events/746663115715448/

Date of event:
Tue. Jan. 15, 2019, 6:00am
Location:
TBD See Facebook
Business Law Society 2019 Firm Tours (1L)

The BLS is excited to announce 2019 firm tours offered by some of Canada’s largest business law firms! These are great opportunities to learn about the differences between firms, ask questions, and network with legal professionals in advance of these firms' hiring opportunities for 1L students. Details about times and the sign-up process can be found below. We look forward to seeing you at these events!

List of Participating Firms and Dates:

Torys – January 14th, 2019 (12:00-1:00pm)
Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg – January 15th, 2019 (5:00pm)
Blakes, Cassels & Graydon – January 15th, 2019 (2:30-3:30pm)
Dentons – January 17th, 2019 (12:00-1:30pm)
Fasken – January 31st, 2019 (2:00pm)

Sign-Up Information:

The sign-up sheet will be shared on the Facebook event page on Monday, January 7th at 1:00pm.

https://www.facebook.com/events/374061873144971/?active_tab=about

Tours will be assigned on a first-come first-serve basis. Students will be able to attend a maximum of two tours (unless space permits otherwise.) Please only rank tours which you are able to attend.

For example, if you can only attend the tours at Davies, Blakes and Dentons please rank those tours in your preferred order and leave your fourth and fifth options blank. Filling out the form does not guarantee a spot on a tour. You will receive an email from BLS confirming a spot on a tour. Please note that once you have filled out this form and receive a spot on a tour, your name will be provided to the participating firms.

If you have any questions or concerns please email us at blstoronto@gmail.com.

Event conditions:
Registration required
Tax Law Society's Networking Roundtable

Hey everyone! Interested in tax law? Interested in networking? Interested in employers that hire during the 1L and 2L recruits? If you answered yes to any of these questions, then the Tax Law Society's Networking Roundtable event is for you! The Tax Law Society will be hosting their Networking Roundtable on January 16th at 6 PM. We have 14 lawyers scheduled to attend from 7 firms. This event is limited to 21 students and therefore, we ask that you fill out the attached registration form. Registration is on a first-come first-served basis with one caveat, we will give preference to 1Ls. Once registered, attendance is mandatory! Location will be updated closer to the event date. 

Link:

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScn9CoDoOVRiqSKlqujoeMgiR7D5PWL...

 

 

 
Date of event:
Wed. Jan. 16, 2019, 6:00pm
Location:
TBD
Event conditions:
Registration required
Women and the Law 17th Annual Professional Networking and Mentorship Event

Women & the Law is pleased to host our 17th Annual Professional Networking and Mentorship Event! This event brings together women of the legal profession, including law students, practicing lawyers, and academics, to foster important relationships in the legal community. This is a great opportunity to network with current or future employers—last year we had over 80 legal professionals in attendance!

The event will take place on Wednesday, January 16th, 2019 from 6:00pm to 9:00pm in the Donegan Conference Centre (Room FL223) in the Jackman Law Building at the University of Toronto. There will be a cash bar and complimentary hors-d'oeuvres. Thank you to all students who RSVP'd, we look forward to seeing you there.

Feel free to email women.utlaw@gmail.com if you have any questions/concerns.

Date of event:
Wed. Jan. 16, 2019, 6:00pm
Location:
FL223
Event conditions:
Registration required

Centres, Legal Clinics, and Special Programs

Tenant Duty Counsel Assistance Project

The Tenant Duty Counsel Assistance Project (TDCAP) is recruiting upper-year student volunteers for the Winter 2019 semester. (Sorry, all 1L spots are already full). Student volunteers in this program assist tenant duty counsel lawyers on-site at the Toronto South location of the Landlord and Tenant Board (LTB) - Canada's busiest administrative tribunal. Tenant duty counsel offer immediate legal advice, brief services, or representation to many of the self-represented tenants who attend the LTB, often facing eviction proceedings and the risk of homelessness. Students work (often in pairs) to identify unrepresented tenants in an often-chaotic litigation environment, sign them up for legal assistance, collect needed information and documents, and track outcomes.

To participate, all you need is a gap in your class schedule during any of the following available timeslots:

  • Mondays from 9am to noon
  • Mondays from 1pm to 3:30pm
  • Wednesdays from 9am to noon
  • Thursdays from 9am to noon

Participants commit to attending every other week, but are excused for illness, intensives, etc. No shifts will be scheduled during reading week, exams, or any other days that regular Faculty classes are not held. Mandatory training will be offered the morning of Friday, January 11, 2019 - on-site at the LTB and then down at the offices of the host organization for this program, the Advocacy Centre for Tenants Ontario (55 University Avenue). However, late signups will be accepted and alternative training times scheduled, as needed.

If interested, email benjamin.ries@utoronto.ca to sign up.

Date of event:
Fri. Jan. 11, 2019, 9:00am
Location:
79 St. Clair Avenue East, 2nd floor
Event conditions:
Registration required
DLS Housing Law: Grand Rounds

Open to the broader law school community, with special invitation to DLS-involved volunteers and caseworkers, "Grand Rounds" are a chance for each division at Downtown Legal Services to profile current issues in our areas of law and practice, through anonymized and interactive discussion of real client matters at the clinic. On Wednesday, January 16, 2019 from 12:30pm - 2:00 pm in J140, join the DLS Housing Law division to hear about our work, our clients, our dearest friends, our fiercest enemies, and everything in between.

Are you a student who might want to work in a legal clinic this summer or in the future? Thinking about registering for the DLS part-time or full-time credit course next year? Do you have strong feelings about property law, contract law, administrative law, or human rights? Or do you just want to get the jump on your landlord with insider tips? This presentation is for you.

Sorry, lunch will not be served. We'll be too busy serving hot takes and cold facts about some of our in-progress client matters.

Date of event:
Wed. Jan. 16, 2019, 12:30pm
Location:
J140
Event conditions:
No lunch served
Write for the Asper Centre

Premier Ford's use of the non-withstanding clause, cannabis policing, the new sex-ed curriculum, the use of segregation in penitentiaries... Interested in these or any other constitutional rights issues? Want to express your opinions on a platform with wide reach? Write a piece for the Asper Centre!

We are looking for short blog posts from students from all years. There is no strict deadline for the posts.

If you are interested or have questions, email Jasmit De Saffel at jasmit.desaffel@mail.utoronto.ca.

Career Development Office and Employment Opportunities

Journals, Research, and Scholarship

Journal of Law & Equality: Call for Submissions
Journal of Law & Equality: Call for Submissions (Suggested Deadline: February 1, 2019)
 
The Journal of Law & Equality (JLE) is a peer-reviewed journal at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law. We aim to promote critical and informed debate on equality issues, with special emphasis on the Canadian context. The JLE publishes peer-reviewed full-length articles, case comments, notes, and book reviews by professors, judges, practitioners, and students across Canada.
 
We are now accepting submissions on a rolling basis. We encourage you to submit by February 1, 2019.
 
To make a submission, please visit our online submissions system at https://jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/utjle/index. To contact us, please email jle.editor@utoronto.ca.

Bookstore

January Hours

Bookstore January Hours

January 7-20 (first two weeks of term)

Monday-Thursday: 9 am - 5 pm

Friday: 11 am - 7 pm

Saturday & Sunday: Closed

January 21-Feb 3 (third and fourth week of term)

Monday-Thursday: 10 am - 4 pm

Friday: 3 pm - 7 pm

Saturday & Sunday: Closed

External Announcements: Events

Tue, Jan 15: The Ethical Algorithm (w/ Michael Kearns)

The Ethical Algorithm

Many recent mainstream media articles and popular books have raised alarms over anti-social algorithmic behavior, especially regarding machine learning and artificial intelligence. The concerns include leaks of sensitive personal data by predictive models, algorithmic discrimination as a side-effect of machine learning, and inscrutable decisions made by complex models. While standard and legitimate responses to these phenomena include calls for stronger and better laws and regulations, researchers in machine learning, statistics and related areas are also working on designing better-behaved algorithms. An explosion of recent research in areas such as differential privacy, algorithmic fairness and algorithmic game theory is forging a new science of socially aware algorithm design. I will survey these developments and attempt to place them in a broader societal context. This talk is based on the forthcoming book “The Ethical Algorithm”, co-authored with Aaron Roth (Oxford University Press, 2019).

☛ please register here

Michael Kearns
University of Pennsylvania
Computer Science

04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Wed, Jan 16: The Ethics of Citizen Selection of Refugees for Resettlement (w/ Patti Lenard)

The Ethics of Citizen Selection of Refugees for Resettlement

One way that states discharge their duties to refugees is by admitting them for resettlement. Of the millions of refugees in places of refuge, only one million are specially designated by the UNHCR for resettlement in third countries. These individuals, identified by the UNCHR as either especially vulnerable, or particularly unlikely to find any alternative permanent solution, are prioritized for admission to third countries for resettlement. Of these, only a small number are actually selected by host countries for resettlement, however; last year, just over 100 000 found permanent homes in third countries. In this talk, I consider the ethics of one particular way of selecting refugees for resettlement, that is, by giving citizens the driver’s seat in selecting refugees for admission to resettlement. I ask whether it is morally acceptable to permit citizens to name specific refugees for resettlement, under the condition that they are willing to support – financially and emotionally – those whom they name. I argue, ultimately, that there are moral goods that derive from permitting citizens to select refugees for admission, but that they do not outweigh the importance of offering scarce resettlement spots to those who are most in need. Therefore, any refugee admission scheme that permits citizens to select refugees must constrain those who can be named for admission to those who are most in need. I conclude with some proposals for how this can be achieved.

☛ please register here

Patti Tamara Lenard
University of Ottawa
Graduate School of Public and International Affairs

12:30 PM - 02:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Wed, Jan 16: From Aspiration to Reality: Open Smart Cities (w/ Tracey Lauriault)

From Aspiration to Reality: Open Smart Cities

Open smart cities might become a reality for Canada.  Globally there are a number of initiatives, programs, and practices that are open smart city like which means that it is possible to have an open, responsive and engaged city that is both socio-technologically enabled, but also one where there is receptivity to and a willingness to grow a critically informed type of technological citizenship (Feenberg). For an open smart city to exist, public officials, the private sector, scholars, civil society and residents and citizens require a definition and a guide to start the exercise of imagining what an open smart city might look like. There is much critical scholarship about the smart city and there are many counter smart city narratives, but there are few depictions of what engagement, participatory design and technological leadership might be. The few examples that do exist are project based and few are systemic. An open smart city definition and guide was therefore created by a group of stakeholders in such a way that it can be used as the basis for the design of an open smart city from the ground up, or to help actors shape or steer the course of emerging or ongoing data and networked urbanist forms (Kitchin) of smart cities to lead them towards being open, engaged and receptive to technological citizenship.

This talk will discuss some of the successes resulting from this Open Smart Cities work, which might also be called a form or engaged scholarship. For example the language for the call for tender of the Infrastructure Canada Smart City Challenge was modified to include as a requisite that engagement and openness be part of the submissions from communities. Also, those involved with the guide have been writing policy articles that critique either AI or the smart city while also offering examples of what is possible. These articles are being read by proponents of Sidewalk Labs in Toronto. Also, the global Open Data Conference held in Argentina in September of 2018 hosted a full workshop on Open Smart Cities and finally Open North is working toward developing key performance indicators to assess those shortlisted by Infrastructure Canada and to help those communities develop an Open Smart Cities submission. The objective of the talk is to demonstrate that it is actually possible to shift public policy on large infrastructure projects, at least, in the short term.

☛ please register here

Tracey Lauriault
Carleton University
Communication Studies

04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
Rm 200, Larkin Building 

Wed, Jan 23: Misinformation and Freedom of Expression (w/ Etienne Brown)

Misinformation and Freedom of Expression

With the rise of ‘fake news,’ European liberal democracies are currently in the midst of a debate about the value of laws that aim to regulate the spread of false information on the internet. One central objection directed against such laws is that they represent undue violations of our individual right to freedom of expression. In this presentation, I argue that they do not. More precisely, I contend that legal prohibitions against the intentional spread of false information can be justified on three main philosophical accounts of free speech: the epistemic account, the civic duties account, and the harm-based account. I then consider the objection according to which any legal prohibition against intentional misinformation will unjustly set back the interests of individuals who unintentionally misinform others.

☛ please register here

Étienne Brown
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
Visiting Postdoctoral Fellow

12:30 PM - 02:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Mon, Jan 28: The Ethics of International Adoption (w/ Rachel Nolan)

The Ethics of International Adoption

Illegal or gray adoptions are most frequently associated with armed conflicts and dirty wars in Argentina, Francoist Spain, and Nazi Germany. Cross-racial forcible adoption also has a painful history as part of settler colonial projects in Canada, the U.S., and Australia. This talk will consider a case that combines elements of both historical patterns: Guatemala during the twentieth century. International adoptions began during Guatemala’s civil war (1960-1996) and grew rapidly–overtaking other “sender” countries until 1 in 110 children born in Guatemala was relinquished at the height of the adoption boom. This talk will draw on oral histories, judicial records, and all of the state adoption files from the period to consider the adoptions of indigenous children during the most violent years of the war (1982-1986) without meaningful parental consent as part of a wider project to erase indigenous peoples. Forcible adoption is just now beginning to be understood, like sexual violence, as a tool of war and social control.

☛ please register here

Rachel Nolan
Columbia University
Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race

co-sponsored by:

04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Tue, Jan 29: Risk, Intersectional Inequalities and Racial Proxies: How Is Machine Learning and Big Data Shaping Legal and Criminal Justice Analysis of “Risk”? (w/ Kelly Hannah-Moffat)

Risk, Intersectional Inequalities and Racial Proxies: How Is Machine Learning and Big Data Shaping Legal and Criminal Justice Analysis of “Risk”? 

CJS and social justice organizations and individuals are challenging and redefining conventional risk episteme(s) through the use of big data analytics, which are shifting organizational risk practices, challenging social science methods of assessing risk, and affecting knowledge about risk. I argue that big data reconfigures risk by producing a form of algorithmic risk, which is different from the actuarial risk techniques already in use in many justice sectors; that new experts are entering the risk gametechnologists who make data public and accessible to a range of stakeholders; and that big data analytics can be used to produce forms of usable knowledge but questions still persist on whether or not these technologies can learn how to limit bias and inequality.

☛ please register here  

Kelly Hannah-Moffat
University of Toronto
Criminology & Sociolegal Studies

04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin

Wed, Jan 30: Boredom, Objectivity and the Picture of Solidarity (w/ Brian Price)

Boredom, Objectivity and the Picture of Solidarity

In this talk, I will propose that objectivity is only accessible in a state of boredom, and that boredom is an experience that is much rarer than we regularly suppose it to be. One consequence of this claim will be to add ballast, in temporal terms, to Richard Rorty’s well known contention that solidarity is a more reliable way of accessing agreement in the social, and for the sake of social change, than is any appeal we might make to objectivity. Yet, in my account, what follows or interrupts boredom are acts of picturing—attempts to feature for ourselves a different way of relating to what appears to us in the rare instant of boredom, and that divide us from each other just as much as unite us. At issue, then, will be the extent to which acts of picturing—described as a particular way of thinking and of regarding thought in relation to the failure of objectivity—produce an imaginative density across perceivers that might inhibit solidarity by virtue of the same procedures that compel it. At the heart of my discussion will be a little-seen film, Sleeping Dogs Lie (2006, d. Bobcat Golthwaite).

☛ please register here

Brian Price
University of Toronto
Cinema Studies

12:30 PM - 02:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Mon, Jan 14: Bartleby or the Bacchae? A Feminist Theory of Refusal (w/ Bonnie Honig)

Bartleby or the Bacchae? A Feminist Theory of Refusal

“Where’s your spine?” we often say to those who seem to lack moral ‘backbone.’ How do such vertical metaphors limit and drive our imagination of refusal? Drawing on Adriana Cavarero’s work, Inclination, this lecture develops a postural analysis of refusal in the Antigone, the Bacchae, Thoreau’s “Walking”, and Leonardo da Vinci’s painting of the Madonna. Cavarero promotes inclination (the leaning in posture of maternal care) as the preferred posture for her ethics and politics. This lecture pluralizes the feminist subject position of inclination to include sorority, as well, and argues that the refusals we find in maternal and sororal care express not only love but rage, and promise not only the holding of community but also the dismemberment of revolution/new beginning.

☛ please register here

Bonnie Honig
Brown University
Nancy Duke Lewis Professor of Modern Culture and Media and Political Science & Interim Director, Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women

04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Dr. Vincent Chiao - Thursday, January 17, 2019 - 12:30-2:00pm - Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies Fall Speakers Series

Criminal Law in the Age of the Administrative State

Dr. Vincent Chiao, Assistant Professor, University of Toronto Faculty of Law

What the criminal law is for, Chiao suggests, is sustaining social cooperation with public institutions. Consequently, we only have reason to support the use of the criminal law insofar as its use is consistent with our reasons for valuing the social order established by those institutions. By starting with the political morality of public institutions rather than the interpersonal morality of private relationships, this account shows how the criminal law is continuous with the modern administrative and welfare state, and why it is answerable to the same political virtues.

Date: Thursday, January 17, 2019
Time: 12:30pm to 2:00pm
Location: Ericson Seminar Room (room 265)

A light lunch will be served at 12:00 noon in the Lounge.


The talk will begin at 12:30pm in the Ericson Seminar Room (room 265)
Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies,
14 Queen’s Park Crescent West, Toronto, ON Canada, M5S 3K9


If you are a person with a disability and require accommodation, please contact Anjelica Cole at 416-978-3722 x226 or email anjelica.cole@utoronto.ca and we will do our best to make appropriate arrangements.

Dr. Ashley Rubin - Friday, February 1st, 2019 - 12:30-2:00pm - Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies Fall Speakers Series

Performing Artivism: Feminists, Lawyers, and Online Mobilization in China  

Dr. Sida Liu, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Law at the University of Toronto Faculty and Faculty Fellow at the American Bar Foundation

In authoritarian contexts where the state is the primary performer in the public sphere and political mobilization is constrained and repressed, activists often seek to carve out a public space to confront the frontstage and backstage of the state’s performance in order to pursue collective action. Comparing the online mobilization of feminists and lawyers in China, this project investigates how performance arts are used by activists to challenge the authoritarian state in the age of social media. Performing “artivism” is to create conspicuous spectacles in the public eye for the purposes of exposing the state’s illegal or repressive backstage actions or promoting alternative values and social norms different from the official ideology. By subversively disrupting the evidential boundaries set by the state, Chinese activists were able to gain momentum and public support for their collective action. However, it was precisely the success of their “artivism” that contributed to the government crackdowns on both feminists and lawyers in 2015.

Date: Friday, February 1st, 2019
Time: 12:30pm to 2:00pm
Location: Ericson Seminar Room (room 265)

A light lunch will be served at 12:00 noon in the Lounge.


The talk will begin at 12:30pm in the Ericson Seminar Room (room 265)
Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies,
14 Queen’s Park Crescent West, Toronto, ON Canada, M5S 3K9


If you are a person with a disability and require accommodation, please contact Anjelica Cole at 416-978-3722 x226 or email anjelica.cole@utoronto.ca and we will do our best to make appropriate arrangements.

Building Community, Accessing Justice: In Conversation with the author of Scarborough Catherine Hernandez, January 23, 2019 in room 1014 Helliwell Centre, Osgoode Hall Law School

Building Community, Accessing Justice: In Conversation with the author of Scarborough Catherine Hernandez

 

A conversation with the author, playwright, activist about her book Scarborough, access to justice and building community beyond institutional structures. Catherine Hernandez (@theloudlady) is the award-winning author of Scarborough (Arsenal Pulp Press)Scarborough won the 2015 Jim Wong-Chu Award, was shortlisted for the Toronto Book Award, the Evergreen Forest of Reading Award, Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction, the Trillium Book Award; and longlisted for Canada Reads 2018. It made the "Best of 2017" list for the Globe and Mail, National Post, Quill and Quire, and CBC Books. 

 

 

Kindly RSVP https://webform.osgoode.yorku.ca/view.php?id=317309

Date of event:
Wed. Jan. 23, 2019, 12:30pm

External Announcements: Opportunities

Annual Speed-Networking Mentor-a-thon 2019

FACL Ontario’s annual Speed Mentor-A-Thon is coming up on Monday, January 28, 2019 and we have opened up registration for mentees and mentors!

Law students and articling students will have an opportunity to connect with lawyers from diverse backgrounds through “speed mentoring sessions”, then mix-and-mingle at our post-event reception. This is a fantastic opportunity to expand your professional network and make valuable connections with prominent members of the legal profession. The event begins at 5:00pm with a cocktail reception and will be hosted by Osler, Hoskin and Harcourt LLP (Suite 6300, 1 First Canadian Place, 100 King Street West, Toronto)

Please register as a mentee or mentor by:

  1. Filling out the Form located at: https://on.facl.ca/tc-events/annual-speed-networking-mentor-a-thon-2019/
  2. Purchasing a ticket below!

Spots fill up quickly, so register soon!

This event is open to all Canadian-trained law students, including articling students. For NCA candidates and internationally trained lawyers, stay tuned for an upcoming event in the spring.

When?

Monday, January 28, 2019

5:00pm – 8:00pm

Where?

Osler, Hoskin and Harcourt LLP

Suite 6300, 1 First Canadian Place

100 King Street West, Toronto

Date of event:
Mon. Jan. 28, 2019, 5:00pm
Location:
Osler, Hoskin and Harcourt LLP
Event conditions:
First come first served
Law Students Wanted to Participate in CIAJ’s Provincial Roundtables on Jury Representation

Law Students Wanted to Participate in CIAJ’s Provincial Roundtables on Jury Representation
In the spring and fall of 2019, the Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice (CIAJ) will organize provincial roundtables on the topic of systemic barriers to the representation of Indigenous peoples and racialized minorities on juries in Canada. The roundtables will take place in Manitoba (April 6, 2019), British Columbia (June 1, 2019), Alberta, Ontario, Quebec and Atlantic Canada respectively (specific dates to come). Law students studying or living in these provinces will be invited to work alongside members of the Roundtable Planning Committee.

How to participate
Students are encouraged to send their CV and a cover letter explaining their willingness to participate in this project. Please submit your documents to ciaj@ciaj-icaj.ca by January 31, 2019.

Details: https://ciaj-icaj.ca/en/featured-call-for-students/

Invitation to faculty - Managing Your Digital Footprint workshop

The University of Toronto’s Information Technology Services (ITS) is pleased to announce our upcoming information security workshop for faculty members on Friday, January 18. We ask that you distribute this information to your faculty mailing lists – the event provides a wonderful opportunity for faculty members to learn about profession-specific information security practices. 

 

Event: Managing Your Digital Footprint 

 

Description: This workshop, offered by the Provost’s Office and led by ITS (information security and education and awareness teams) will provide faculty with practical tips on how to safeguard personal and professional information in online, public and workplace settings. Information security suggestions for both teaching and research contexts will be discussed, with lots of time for questions. 

 

Date: Friday, Jan. 18, 2019 

Time: 12 p.m. – 2 p.m. 

Location: Simcoe Hall, Governing Council Chamber 

Additional Details: This workshop is limited to faculty members only. Lunch will be provided. Interested parties can register at http://www.faculty.utoronto.ca/2018-19-managing-your-digital-footprint/

External Announcements: Other

Invitation to Participate in Research

As a student who is currently attending a law school program in Ontario, you are being invited to participate in an online research study being conducted by Dr. Donald Saklofske and Samantha Chen, Ph.D. Candidate, who are part of the Department of Psychology at Western University, London ON. Briefly, the study involves completing a set of online questionnaires about yourself and your experiences of social support as well as various psychological outcomes. It is anticipated that the entire task will take approximately 20-30 minutes. Following the completion of the survey, you will be offered the opportunity to enter a draw to win one of 25 gift cards valued at $20 or $50 (Tim Horton’s or Starbucks).

 

If you would like to participate in this study please click on the following link to access the letter of information and survey: https://uwopsych.eu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_cAccLn9aWEGxoCp

 

If you have any further questions or would like more information regarding this research and/or your participation, please contact Samantha Chen.

 

Thank you,

 

Samantha Chen
Department of Psychology
Western University

schen534@uwo.ca

Late announcements

SLS Student Experience Town Hall

On Thursday, January 31 from 12:30-2:00, the SLS will be collecting feedback and fostering discussion about your student experience. What will we be discussing? That’s completely up to you! Please fill out this Google Form to highlight some topics you’d like to discuss:

https://goo.gl/forms/gb7WTAfC133xBCof1

Come share your thoughts on topics like access to resources, mental health, the CDO, or whatever else you’d like. Food will be provided. Room TBD.

Date of event:
Thu. Jan. 31, 2019, 12:30pm
Location:
TBD.

Registration - LSP workshop: Building Your Professional Network

Use the form below to register for the following Leadership Skills Program workshop:

Building Your Professional Network
Wednesday February 13, 12:30 – 2:00
Presenter: Christine Felgueiras
Location: J130

Registration - LSP workshop: Ignite Your Leadership Potential with Emotional Intelligence

Use the form below to register for the following Leadership Skills Program workshop:

Ignite Your Leadership Potential with Emotional Intelligence - 1:1 coaching session with complimentary EI assessment report
Individual sessions
Presenter: Anne-Marie Sorrenti

Top 10 news stories of 2018

Thursday, January 10, 2019

Top 10From outstanding students and remarkable events to alumni achievements and new faculty, here are the stories that made you click in 2018.

Prof. Michael Trebilcock writes "For developing countries looking for guidance, role models are sorely lacking"

Monday, January 7, 2019

In a commentary in the Globe and Mail, Prof. Michael Trebilcock writes about the difficulty of finding relevant role models for developing countries looking to improve the quality of their institutions ("For developing countries looking for guidance, role models are sorely lacking," January 1, 2019).

Read the full commentary on the Globe and Mail website, or below.


 

Headnotes - Jan 7 2019

Announcements

Web Site and Headnotes

Law alumni e.newsletter, December 2018
Law alumni e.newsletter, December 2018

Every month, the Faculty of Law sends an email newsletter to alumni to keep them up to date with the latest law school news and events.

Read the December 2018 alumni e.newsletter.

Deans' Offices

Yak’s Snacks, Mon, Jan 14

Please join Dean Ed Iacobucci at “Yak’s Snacks”.
Location: Jackman Atrium
Time:  10 – 11 a.m.
Please BRING YOUR OWN MUG

Factum Writing Session

This factum writing session is intended to help mooters working on their facta, but anyone with an interest is welcome to attend!  Please join us in J140 from 12:30 to 2:00 pm on Thursday, January 22nd.

Lawyers Doing Cool Things - Matt Mundy J.D. 2012

Lawyers Doing Cool Things - Matt Mundy, J.D. 2012

Matt joined Canopy Rivers (cannabis company) in May 2018 as General Counsel. Prior to joining Canopy Rivers, Matt was an associate at Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP (Blakes), where he was an active member of the Blakes Cannabis group and regularly wrote and spoke on the latest developments in the industry.

Monday January 14th, 12:30 – 2:00

Sandwiches and water will be available

To register, click here

Date of event:
Mon. Jan. 14, 2019, 12:30pm
Event conditions:
Registration required
The Future of Law: Key trends shaping the legal profession

The Future of Law: Key trends shaping the legal profession

January 15, 12:30 - 2:00

Featuring Faculty of Law professor Gillian Hadfield, a leading scholar on this topic, this session will focus on the forces that are transforming the legal profession and legal services.

 Topics covered will include: 

  • How artificial intelligence and globalization are reshaping the market for legal services
  • How technology and other disruptive approaches are creating new opportunities in the delivery of legal services
  • The challenges to the “big law” paradigm
  • The impact of alternative business structures
  • Access to justice and the promise of technology
  • The changing skill set required to be a successful lawyer

This is the first in a series of “Future of Law” workshops. Upcoming sessions will focus on AI and its impact on the law and legal services, and the ways in which big law firms are attempting to adapt to the rapidly changing nature of client expectations and the structure of legal services.

To register, click here.

 

Date of event:
Tue. Jan. 15, 2019, 12:30pm
Event conditions:
Registration required

Academic Events

Wright Lecture: "Institutions for Protecting Constitutional Democracy" by Mark Tushnet
Mark Tushnet

This year's Wright Lecture will be delivered by Mark Tushnet.  The lecture is titled, “Institutions for Protecting Constitutional Democracy: Some Conceptual Preliminaries” and will be delivered on Tuesday, January 22, starting at 4:10 pm in Jackman 140.  Please join us for this exciting academic event. 

 

Law and Economics Workshop: Sarath Sanga

LAW & ECONOMICS COLLOQUIUM

presents

Sarath Sanga
Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law

Network Effects in Corporate Governance

Tuesday, January 15, 2019
4:10 - 5:45
Room FL219 (John Willis Classroom)
78 Queen's Park

Most public companies incorporate in Delaware. Is this because they prefer its legal system or are they simply following a trend? Using the incorporation histories of over 22,000 public companies from 1930 to 2010, I show that firms are more influenced by
changes in each other’s decisions than by changes in the law. The analysis exploits an unexpected legal shock that increased Delaware’s long-run share from 30 to 74 percent. I attribute most of this change to a cascading effect in which the decisions of past firms successively influence future cohorts. Delaware firms also enjoyed abnormal returns precisely during those years in which the Delaware network grew most.

 

For more workshop information, please send an email to events.law@utoronto.ca 

Date of event:
Tue. Jan. 15, 2019, 4:00pm
Location:
Room FL219 (John Willis Classroom)
The James Hausman Tax Law and Policy Workshop: Tom Brennan

The James Hausman Tax Law & Policy Workshop

presents

Tom Brennan
Harvard Law School

Distributed Deferral

Wednesday, January 9, 2019
12:30 - 2:00
Solarium (room FA2), Falconer Hall
84 Queen's Park

We show that a current tax on income is equivalent to a future tax levied on both the original income and the investment returns it earns, provided that the tax rate is constant and that neither the taxpayer nor the government is subject to certain investment or borrowing constraints. We then show that instead of deferring a tax to a single future point in time, the tax may be broken into components that are distributed periodically over time. There is not a unique method for distributing deferral, but we introduce examples of particular methods, including a “non-increasing” deferral method that taxes returns to the original income periodically but does not tax the original amount itself until it is no longer invested. Under idealized assumptions, the deferral method used is irrelevant, but in practice the assumptions may be violated and particular choices can lead to different sorts of risks and planning opportunities. The distributed deferral framework offers a set of tools that can spread the risk of tax rate changes over time, allowing a type of income tax averaging and reducing the ability of taxpayers to benefit from occasional low tax rate environments or tax holidays. In addition, distributed deferral can reduce the ease with which budgetary rules like the Congressional budget window may be manipulated.

***Note from Tom Brennan to attendees at the University of Toronto James Hausman Tax Law and Policy Workshop: This is an early draft paper. All the major ideas are contained herein, but several sections will be rewritten and more developed in the final version. Because this is a work in progress, we are particularly grateful for any thoughts and comments about the work, and our final paper will benefit grateful from them. Thank you in advance for reading, and I very much look forward to talking with you at the workshop.

Date of event:
Wed. Jan. 9, 2019, 12:30pm

Student Activities

iTrek Israel Trip

Come to Israel with your fellow U of T Law students on iTrek!

iTrek is a 7 day trip to Israel from April 27th – May 4th open to all U of T Law students. Over the course of the trip we will explore Israel’s cultural landscape, legal environment, nightlife, high-tech industry, history, and politics. Join your fellow law students for this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity! All costs are covered except your flight/travel insurance + a $350 USD participation fee.

Due to the overwhelming success of the trip last year, we are expanding and are now looking for 30-35 participants. Applications are due February 1st. 

To apply, please fill out the following form: https://goo.gl/forms/QJ6nIuOheC0ifzrf2

Join us at our info session to learn more:

Date: Monday, Jan. 14th
Time: 12:30 – 1:30pm 
Location: TBD

 

 
1L Mooting and Trial Advocacy Information Session

The Moot Court Committee will hold an info session on Wednesday, January 9 at 12:30pm in J250 to cover the various oral advocacy opportunities open to 1Ls: the Baby Gale, the Baby Callaghan, and Trial Advocacy. The session will cover the basics of mooting - none of these opportunities require any past public speaking experience! Lunch will not be provided at this session.

Date of event:
Wed. Jan. 9, 2019, 12:30pm
Location:
J250
Public Interest Gathering

Did you come to law school to make the world a better place?

Us too!

Come join us for U of T Law's third public interest gathering. You'll get to meet like-minded people over food, and hear about the great events coming up this semester from U of T's public interest law clubs.

https://www.facebook.com/events/746663115715448/

Date of event:
Tue. Jan. 15, 2019, 6:00am
Location:
TBD See Facebook
Business Law Society 2019 Firm Tours (1L)

The BLS is excited to announce 2019 firm tours offered by some of Canada’s largest business law firms! These are great opportunities to learn about the differences between firms, ask questions, and network with legal professionals in advance of these firms' hiring opportunities for 1L students. Details about times and the sign-up process can be found below. We look forward to seeing you at these events!

List of Participating Firms and Dates:

Torys – January 14th, 2019 (12:00-1:00pm)
Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg – January 15th, 2019 (5:00pm)
Blakes, Cassels & Graydon – January 15th, 2019 (2:30-3:30pm)
Dentons – January 17th, 2019 (12:00-1:30pm)
Fasken – January 31st, 2019 (2:00pm)

Sign-Up Information:

The sign-up sheet will be shared on the Facebook event page on Monday, January 7th at 1:00pm.

https://www.facebook.com/events/374061873144971/?active_tab=about

Tours will be assigned on a first-come first-serve basis. Students will be able to attend a maximum of two tours (unless space permits otherwise.) Please only rank tours which you are able to attend.

For example, if you can only attend the tours at Davies, Blakes and Dentons please rank those tours in your preferred order and leave your fourth and fifth options blank. Filling out the form does not guarantee a spot on a tour. You will receive an email from BLS confirming a spot on a tour. Please note that once you have filled out this form and receive a spot on a tour, your name will be provided to the participating firms.

If you have any questions or concerns please email us at blstoronto@gmail.com.

Event conditions:
Registration required

Centres, Legal Clinics, and Special Programs

Tenant Duty Counsel Assistance Project

The Tenant Duty Counsel Assistance Project (TDCAP) is recruiting upper-year student volunteers for the Winter 2019 semester. (Sorry, all 1L spots are already full). Student volunteers in this program assist tenant duty counsel lawyers on-site at the Toronto South location of the Landlord and Tenant Board (LTB) - Canada's busiest administrative tribunal. Tenant duty counsel offer immediate legal advice, brief services, or representation to many of the self-represented tenants who attend the LTB, often facing eviction proceedings and the risk of homelessness. Students work (often in pairs) to identify unrepresented tenants in an often-chaotic litigation environment, sign them up for legal assistance, collect needed information and documents, and track outcomes.

To participate, all you need is a gap in your class schedule during any of the following available timeslots:

  • Mondays from 9am to noon
  • Mondays from 1pm to 3:30pm
  • Wednesdays from 9am to noon
  • Thursdays from 9am to noon

Participants commit to attending every other week, but are excused for illness, intensives, etc. No shifts will be scheduled during reading week, exams, or any other days that regular Faculty classes are not held. Mandatory training will be offered the morning of Friday, January 11, 2019 - on-site at the LTB and then down at the offices of the host organization for this program, the Advocacy Centre for Tenants Ontario (55 University Avenue). However, late signups will be accepted and alternative training times scheduled, as needed.

If interested, email benjamin.ries@utoronto.ca to sign up.

Date of event:
Fri. Jan. 11, 2019, 9:00am
Location:
79 St. Clair Avenue East, 2nd floor
Event conditions:
Registration required
DLS Housing Law: Grand Rounds

Open to the broader law school community, with special invitation to DLS-involved volunteers and caseworkers, "Grand Rounds" are a chance for each division at Downtown Legal Services to profile current issues in our areas of law and practice, through anonymized and interactive discussion of real client matters at the clinic. On Wednesday, January 16, 2019 from 12:30pm - 2:00 pm in J140, join the DLS Housing Law division to hear about our work, our clients, our dearest friends, our fiercest enemies, and everything in between.

Are you a student who might want to work in a legal clinic this summer or in the future? Thinking about registering for the DLS part-time or full-time credit course next year? Do you have strong feelings about property law, contract law, administrative law, or human rights? Or do you just want to get the jump on your landlord with insider tips? This presentation is for you.

Sorry, lunch will not be served. We'll be too busy serving hot takes and cold facts about some of our in-progress client matters.

Date of event:
Wed. Jan. 16, 2019, 12:30pm
Location:
J140
Event conditions:
No lunch served
IHRP Year-in-Review Newsletter

Dear staff, students and faculty, 

 

2018 was a banner year at the IHRP, with our students engaged in a range of impactful work through clinic projects, summer fellowship opportunities, and volunteer working groups. Please take a look at our first-ever year-end newsletter to get a glimpse of their extraordinary work in collaboration with community and human rights organizations: https://uoft.me/2018-Newsletter


None of this would have been remotely possible if not for our amazing research associates, faculty, and alumni, who together with students make up the heart and soul of the IHRP. On behalf of the program, I thank you and all our supporters.

All best,

 

Samer

 

Samer Muscati

Director

International Human Rights Program

Career Development Office and Employment Opportunities

Journals, Research, and Scholarship

Call for Submissions: University of Toronto Faculty of Law Review

The University of Toronto Faculty of Law Review is now accepting submissions for Volume 77(2). Submissions are due by 11:59 p.m. on Friday, January 11, 2019

The Law Review publishes articles on a wide array of law-related topics and does not have a particular thematic focus. Any well-considered analysis relating to legal thought is welcome. The Law Review welcomes the submission of articles, case comments, book reviews, notes, and letters. 

More information, including submission requirements, can be found at: https://utflr.law.utoronto.ca/page/submissions 

If you have any questions about the submissions or review process, please contact Aya Schechner, Director of Submissions at submissions.lawreview@utoronto.ca 

Bookstore

January Hours

Bookstore January Hours

January 7-20 (first two weeks of term)

Monday-Thursday: 9 am - 5 pm

Friday: 11 am - 7 pm

Saturday & Sunday: Closed

January 21-Feb 3 (third and fourth week of term)

Monday-Thursday: 10 am - 4 pm

Friday: 3 pm - 7 pm

Saturday & Sunday: Closed

External Announcements: Events

Tue, Jan 8: Artificial Intelligence, Medical Diagnostics and the Limits of Certainty (w/ Sunit Das)

Artificial Intelligence, Medical Diagnostics and the Limits of Certainty

It is estimated that physicians are unable to reach a diagnosis that accounts for their patient’s symptoms in nearly 90% of outpatient patient encounters. Many proponents of artificial intelligence (AI) look to the movement from data gathering to diagnosis as limited by the finite nature of human analytic capability, and consider AI as a mechanism by which to refine this process. This leads us to two divergent perceptions of uncertainty in decision-making. On one hand, some view uncertainty as a bug and argue that optimal decision-making is based on the minimization of uncertainty. On the other hand, uncertainty can be taken as a core feature of the decision-making process in an attempt to weigh various solutions against one another. Here, we make the argument, using the experiences of IBM Watson on Jeopardy! and Watson for Oncology as examples, that the latter is a more likely explanation. This conclusion has significant implications for how we are to understand the integration of artificial intelligence into medical practice.

☛ please register here

Vinyas Harish, University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine
Felipe Morgado, University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine
Sunit Das, University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, Division of Neurosurgery, St. Michael’s Hospital & Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto

04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Tue, Jan 15: The Ethical Algorithm (w/ Michael Kearns)

The Ethical Algorithm

Many recent mainstream media articles and popular books have raised alarms over anti-social algorithmic behavior, especially regarding machine learning and artificial intelligence. The concerns include leaks of sensitive personal data by predictive models, algorithmic discrimination as a side-effect of machine learning, and inscrutable decisions made by complex models. While standard and legitimate responses to these phenomena include calls for stronger and better laws and regulations, researchers in machine learning, statistics and related areas are also working on designing better-behaved algorithms. An explosion of recent research in areas such as differential privacy, algorithmic fairness and algorithmic game theory is forging a new science of socially aware algorithm design. I will survey these developments and attempt to place them in a broader societal context. This talk is based on the forthcoming book “The Ethical Algorithm”, co-authored with Aaron Roth (Oxford University Press, 2019).

☛ please register here

Michael Kearns
University of Pennsylvania
Computer Science

04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Wed, Jan 16: The Ethics of Citizen Selection of Refugees for Resettlement (w/ Patti Lenard)

The Ethics of Citizen Selection of Refugees for Resettlement

One way that states discharge their duties to refugees is by admitting them for resettlement. Of the millions of refugees in places of refuge, only one million are specially designated by the UNHCR for resettlement in third countries. These individuals, identified by the UNCHR as either especially vulnerable, or particularly unlikely to find any alternative permanent solution, are prioritized for admission to third countries for resettlement. Of these, only a small number are actually selected by host countries for resettlement, however; last year, just over 100 000 found permanent homes in third countries. In this talk, I consider the ethics of one particular way of selecting refugees for resettlement, that is, by giving citizens the driver’s seat in selecting refugees for admission to resettlement. I ask whether it is morally acceptable to permit citizens to name specific refugees for resettlement, under the condition that they are willing to support – financially and emotionally – those whom they name. I argue, ultimately, that there are moral goods that derive from permitting citizens to select refugees for admission, but that they do not outweigh the importance of offering scarce resettlement spots to those who are most in need. Therefore, any refugee admission scheme that permits citizens to select refugees must constrain those who can be named for admission to those who are most in need. I conclude with some proposals for how this can be achieved.

☛ please register here

Patti Tamara Lenard
University of Ottawa
Graduate School of Public and International Affairs

12:30 PM - 02:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Wed, Jan 16: From Aspiration to Reality: Open Smart Cities (w/ Tracey Lauriault)

From Aspiration to Reality: Open Smart Cities

Open smart cities might become a reality for Canada.  Globally there are a number of initiatives, programs, and practices that are open smart city like which means that it is possible to have an open, responsive and engaged city that is both socio-technologically enabled, but also one where there is receptivity to and a willingness to grow a critically informed type of technological citizenship (Feenberg). For an open smart city to exist, public officials, the private sector, scholars, civil society and residents and citizens require a definition and a guide to start the exercise of imagining what an open smart city might look like. There is much critical scholarship about the smart city and there are many counter smart city narratives, but there are few depictions of what engagement, participatory design and technological leadership might be. The few examples that do exist are project based and few are systemic. An open smart city definition and guide was therefore created by a group of stakeholders in such a way that it can be used as the basis for the design of an open smart city from the ground up, or to help actors shape or steer the course of emerging or ongoing data and networked urbanist forms (Kitchin) of smart cities to lead them towards being open, engaged and receptive to technological citizenship.

This talk will discuss some of the successes resulting from this Open Smart Cities work, which might also be called a form or engaged scholarship. For example the language for the call for tender of the Infrastructure Canada Smart City Challenge was modified to include as a requisite that engagement and openness be part of the submissions from communities. Also, those involved with the guide have been writing policy articles that critique either AI or the smart city while also offering examples of what is possible. These articles are being read by proponents of Sidewalk Labs in Toronto. Also, the global Open Data Conference held in Argentina in September of 2018 hosted a full workshop on Open Smart Cities and finally Open North is working toward developing key performance indicators to assess those shortlisted by Infrastructure Canada and to help those communities develop an Open Smart Cities submission. The objective of the talk is to demonstrate that it is actually possible to shift public policy on large infrastructure projects, at least, in the short term.

☛ please register here

Tracey Lauriault
Carleton University
Communication Studies

04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
Rm 200, Larkin Building 

Wed, Jan 23: Misinformation and Freedom of Expression (w/ Etienne Brown)

Misinformation and Freedom of Expression

With the rise of ‘fake news,’ European liberal democracies are currently in the midst of a debate about the value of laws that aim to regulate the spread of false information on the internet. One central objection directed against such laws is that they represent undue violations of our individual right to freedom of expression. In this presentation, I argue that they do not. More precisely, I contend that legal prohibitions against the intentional spread of false information can be justified on three main philosophical accounts of free speech: the epistemic account, the civic duties account, and the harm-based account. I then consider the objection according to which any legal prohibition against intentional misinformation will unjustly set back the interests of individuals who unintentionally misinform others.

☛ please register here

Étienne Brown
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
Visiting Postdoctoral Fellow

12:30 PM - 02:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Mon, Jan 28: The Ethics of International Adoption (w/ Rachel Nolan)

The Ethics of International Adoption

Illegal or gray adoptions are most frequently associated with armed conflicts and dirty wars in Argentina, Francoist Spain, and Nazi Germany. Cross-racial forcible adoption also has a painful history as part of settler colonial projects in Canada, the U.S., and Australia. This talk will consider a case that combines elements of both historical patterns: Guatemala during the twentieth century. International adoptions began during Guatemala’s civil war (1960-1996) and grew rapidly–overtaking other “sender” countries until 1 in 110 children born in Guatemala was relinquished at the height of the adoption boom. This talk will draw on oral histories, judicial records, and all of the state adoption files from the period to consider the adoptions of indigenous children during the most violent years of the war (1982-1986) without meaningful parental consent as part of a wider project to erase indigenous peoples. Forcible adoption is just now beginning to be understood, like sexual violence, as a tool of war and social control.

☛ please register here

Rachel Nolan
Columbia University
Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race

co-sponsored by:

04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Tue, Jan 29: Risk, Intersectional Inequalities and Racial Proxies: How Is Machine Learning and Big Data Shaping Legal and Criminal Justice Analysis of “Risk”? (w/ Kelly Hannah-Moffat)

Risk, Intersectional Inequalities and Racial Proxies: How Is Machine Learning and Big Data Shaping Legal and Criminal Justice Analysis of “Risk”? 

CJS and social justice organizations and individuals are challenging and redefining conventional risk episteme(s) through the use of big data analytics, which are shifting organizational risk practices, challenging social science methods of assessing risk, and affecting knowledge about risk. I argue that big data reconfigures risk by producing a form of algorithmic risk, which is different from the actuarial risk techniques already in use in many justice sectors; that new experts are entering the risk gametechnologists who make data public and accessible to a range of stakeholders; and that big data analytics can be used to produce forms of usable knowledge but questions still persist on whether or not these technologies can learn how to limit bias and inequality.

☛ please register here  

Kelly Hannah-Moffat
University of Toronto
Criminology & Sociolegal Studies

04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin

Wed, Jan 30: Boredom, Objectivity and the Picture of Solidarity (w/ Brian Price)

Boredom, Objectivity and the Picture of Solidarity

In this talk, I will propose that objectivity is only accessible in a state of boredom, and that boredom is an experience that is much rarer than we regularly suppose it to be. One consequence of this claim will be to add ballast, in temporal terms, to Richard Rorty’s well known contention that solidarity is a more reliable way of accessing agreement in the social, and for the sake of social change, than is any appeal we might make to objectivity. Yet, in my account, what follows or interrupts boredom are acts of picturing—attempts to feature for ourselves a different way of relating to what appears to us in the rare instant of boredom, and that divide us from each other just as much as unite us. At issue, then, will be the extent to which acts of picturing—described as a particular way of thinking and of regarding thought in relation to the failure of objectivity—produce an imaginative density across perceivers that might inhibit solidarity by virtue of the same procedures that compel it. At the heart of my discussion will be a little-seen film, Sleeping Dogs Lie (2006, d. Bobcat Golthwaite).

☛ please register here

Brian Price
University of Toronto
Cinema Studies

12:30 PM - 02:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Mon, Jan 14: Bartleby or the Bacchae? A Feminist Theory of Refusal (w/ Bonnie Honig)

Bartleby or the Bacchae? A Feminist Theory of Refusal

“Where’s your spine?” we often say to those who seem to lack moral ‘backbone.’ How do such vertical metaphors limit and drive our imagination of refusal? Drawing on Adriana Cavarero’s work, Inclination, this lecture develops a postural analysis of refusal in the Antigone, the Bacchae, Thoreau’s “Walking”, and Leonardo da Vinci’s painting of the Madonna. Cavarero promotes inclination (the leaning in posture of maternal care) as the preferred posture for her ethics and politics. This lecture pluralizes the feminist subject position of inclination to include sorority, as well, and argues that the refusals we find in maternal and sororal care express not only love but rage, and promise not only the holding of community but also the dismemberment of revolution/new beginning.

☛ please register here

Bonnie Honig
Brown University
Nancy Duke Lewis Professor of Modern Culture and Media and Political Science & Interim Director, Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women

04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin 

Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies Speaker Series Winter 2019 Schedule

CrimSL Speaker Series Winter 2019 Schedule

Thursday, Jan. 17th, 2019
“Criminal Law in the Age of the Administrative State”
Dr. Vincent Chiao, Associate Professor, UofT Faculty of Law

Friday, Feb. 1st, 2019
“Performing Artivism: Feminists, Lawyers, and Online Mobilization in China”

Dr. Sida Liu, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Law at UofT and Faculty Fellow at the

American Bar Foundation

 

Monday, Feb. 11th, 2019

“The Mourning After: Crisis, Law, Politics”

Dr. Stacy Douglas, Associate Professor of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University

 

Friday, Mar. 8th, 2019

“’Three warnings and you’re out’ : banishment and precarious penalty in South

Africa’s informal settlements”

Dr. Gail Super, Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto Mississauga

 

Friday, Mar. 29th, 2019

“The role of anger in (false) accusations”

Dr. Katherine (Katy) DeCelles, Associate Professor of Organizational Behavior at Rotman,

Cross-appointed to the Centre for Criminology and Sociolegal Studies



Unless otherwise specified, talks are held in CrimSL’s Ericson Seminar Room, room 265 at 14 Queen’s Park Crescent West.

A light lunch will be served at 12:00 noon in the CrimSL lounge


If you are a person with a disability and require accommodation, please contact Anjelica Cole at 416-978-3722 x226 or email anjelica.cole@utoronto.ca and we will do our best to make appropriate arrangements.

Dr. Vincent Chiao - Thursday, January 17, 2019 - 12:30-2:00pm - Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies Fall Speakers Series

Criminal Law in the Age of the Administrative State

Dr. Vincent Chiao, Assistant Professor, University of Toronto Faculty of Law

What the criminal law is for, Chiao suggests, is sustaining social cooperation with public institutions. Consequently, we only have reason to support the use of the criminal law insofar as its use is consistent with our reasons for valuing the social order established by those institutions. By starting with the political morality of public institutions rather than the interpersonal morality of private relationships, this account shows how the criminal law is continuous with the modern administrative and welfare state, and why it is answerable to the same political virtues.

Date: Thursday, January 17, 2019
Time: 12:30pm to 2:00pm
Location: Ericson Seminar Room (room 265)

A light lunch will be served at 12:00 noon in the Lounge.


The talk will begin at 12:30pm in the Ericson Seminar Room (room 265)
Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies,
14 Queen’s Park Crescent West, Toronto, ON Canada, M5S 3K9


If you are a person with a disability and require accommodation, please contact Anjelica Cole at 416-978-3722 x226 or email anjelica.cole@utoronto.ca and we will do our best to make appropriate arrangements.

Dr. Ashley Rubin - Friday, February 1st, 2019 - 12:30-2:00pm - Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies Fall Speakers Series

Performing Artivism: Feminists, Lawyers, and Online Mobilization in China  

Dr. Sida Liu, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Law at the University of Toronto Faculty and Faculty Fellow at the American Bar Foundation

In authoritarian contexts where the state is the primary performer in the public sphere and political mobilization is constrained and repressed, activists often seek to carve out a public space to confront the frontstage and backstage of the state’s performance in order to pursue collective action. Comparing the online mobilization of feminists and lawyers in China, this project investigates how performance arts are used by activists to challenge the authoritarian state in the age of social media. Performing “artivism” is to create conspicuous spectacles in the public eye for the purposes of exposing the state’s illegal or repressive backstage actions or promoting alternative values and social norms different from the official ideology. By subversively disrupting the evidential boundaries set by the state, Chinese activists were able to gain momentum and public support for their collective action. However, it was precisely the success of their “artivism” that contributed to the government crackdowns on both feminists and lawyers in 2015.

Date: Friday, February 1st, 2019
Time: 12:30pm to 2:00pm
Location: Ericson Seminar Room (room 265)

A light lunch will be served at 12:00 noon in the Lounge.


The talk will begin at 12:30pm in the Ericson Seminar Room (room 265)
Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies,
14 Queen’s Park Crescent West, Toronto, ON Canada, M5S 3K9


If you are a person with a disability and require accommodation, please contact Anjelica Cole at 416-978-3722 x226 or email anjelica.cole@utoronto.ca and we will do our best to make appropriate arrangements.

External Announcements: Opportunities

Annual Speed-Networking Mentor-a-thon 2019

FACL Ontario’s annual Speed Mentor-A-Thon is coming up on Monday, January 28, 2019 and we have opened up registration for mentees and mentors!

Law students and articling students will have an opportunity to connect with lawyers from diverse backgrounds through “speed mentoring sessions”, then mix-and-mingle at our post-event reception. This is a fantastic opportunity to expand your professional network and make valuable connections with prominent members of the legal profession. The event begins at 5:00pm with a cocktail reception and will be hosted by Osler, Hoskin and Harcourt LLP (Suite 6300, 1 First Canadian Place, 100 King Street West, Toronto)

Please register as a mentee or mentor by:

  1. Filling out the Form located at: https://on.facl.ca/tc-events/annual-speed-networking-mentor-a-thon-2019/
  2. Purchasing a ticket below!

Spots fill up quickly, so register soon!

This event is open to all Canadian-trained law students, including articling students. For NCA candidates and internationally trained lawyers, stay tuned for an upcoming event in the spring.

When?

Monday, January 28, 2019

5:00pm – 8:00pm

Where?

Osler, Hoskin and Harcourt LLP

Suite 6300, 1 First Canadian Place

100 King Street West, Toronto

Date of event:
Mon. Jan. 28, 2019, 5:00pm
Location:
Osler, Hoskin and Harcourt LLP
Event conditions:
First come first served
Law Students Wanted to Participate in CIAJ’s Provincial Roundtables on Jury Representation

Law Students Wanted to Participate in CIAJ’s Provincial Roundtables on Jury Representation
In the spring and fall of 2019, the Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice (CIAJ) will organize provincial roundtables on the topic of systemic barriers to the representation of Indigenous peoples and racialized minorities on juries in Canada. The roundtables will take place in Manitoba (April 6, 2019), British Columbia (June 1, 2019), Alberta, Ontario, Quebec and Atlantic Canada respectively (specific dates to come). Law students studying or living in these provinces will be invited to work alongside members of the Roundtable Planning Committee.

How to participate
Students are encouraged to send their CV and a cover letter explaining their willingness to participate in this project. Please submit your documents to ciaj@ciaj-icaj.ca by January 31, 2019.

Details: https://ciaj-icaj.ca/en/featured-call-for-students/

Jennifer Bergman

SJD Candidate
Thesis title:
Remedying Barriers or Reinforcing Them: The Role of the Law in Mental Health Service Use by Children Engaged in the Family Law and Criminal Justice Systems
Office in Falconer Hall
84 Queen's Park
Toronto, M5S 2C5

Jennifer Bergman is a Doctor of Juridical Science (SJD) candidate at the University of Toronto.  Before commencing the SJD in Fall 2018, she completed a Master of Laws at the University of Toronto, examining how, in practice, the law fails to protect children with mental health issues due to the way that mental health issues are defined in both the family law and criminal justice systems, and because neither system recognizes the importance of intersectionality.  Building upon the knowledge gained from her LL.M. research, her doctoral research explores the relationship between the law and the unmet mental health service needs of young people with mental health issues who are engaged with the family law (child welfare) and youth criminal justice systems, with a focus on how legal and policy frameworks, as written and as applied in practice, affect the experiences of these youth, particularly in terms of access to needed mental health supports and services, and how changes in the ways laws and policies are drafted and implemented can help to reduce the gap between service needs and service use.

Jennifer’s interest in the relationship between law and society generally, and in how different variables intersect and affect people’s perceptions and experiences, was substantially shaped by her undergraduate work in sociology.  In pursuing her Bachelor of Arts at the University of British Columbia, she did considerable research on the interaction between immigration laws, the experiences of foreign domestic workers in Canada, and gender equality.  Following receipt of her B.A., Jennifer obtained an LL.B. from the University of British Columbia.  She subsequently received a Master of Laws, with a specialty in Alternative Dispute Resolution, from Osgoode Hall Law School at York University. 

In the LL.M. program at Osgoode Hall Law School, Jennifer conducted a survey of practicing mediators and, using this original research, as well as existing research, produced a thesis which analyzed the sources of power mediators possess, and how they are used.  The results of her thesis research were published in an article in the Canadian Arbitration and Mediation Journal.  She has also co-authored numerous legal papers, several of which have formed part of the curriculum at continuing legal education courses put on by The Law Society of Ontario, The Advocates’ Society, and Osgoode Professional Development.

Jennifer is a member of the Bar in British Columbia and Ontario, and has practiced law in both provinces.  She has spent the bulk of her legal career practicing family law.  And, it was her experiences in this practice, that fueled her interest in children’s mental health issues, and prompted her to return to academia in Fall 2017.

Education
LL.M., University of Toronto
LL.M., York University
LL.B., University of British Columbia
B.A., University of British Columbia
Awards and Distinctions
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Doctoral Fellowship (2020 – 2023)
Law Foundation of British Columbia, Law Foundation Graduate Fellowship (2019 – 2020)
Law Foundation of British Columbia, Law Foundation Graduate Fellowship (2018 – 2019)
Ontario Graduate Scholarship, University of Toronto (2018 – 2019)
Faculty of Law Fellowship, University of Toronto (2018 – 2021)
Law Foundation of British Columbia, Law Foundation Graduate Fellowship (2017 – 2018)
Ontario Graduate Scholarship, University of Toronto (2017 – 2018)
Professional Affiliations
Law Society of Ontario
Law Society of British Columbia
Selected Publications

Jennifer Bergman, "Intersectionality: A Means for Addressing the Needs of Children with Mental Health Issues who are Engaged with the Family Law and Criminal Justice Systems?" (2019) 36 Windsor YB Access Just 115.

Jennifer Bergman, “Mediators’ Power: A Study of Mediators’ Views about the Sources of Power They Possess and Use” (2011) 20:2 Canadian Arbitration and Mediation Journal 50.

Julie Hannaford and Jennifer Bergman, with assistance by Charu Ruparelia, “The Spousal Support Claim in the High Income Universe” (Paper presented to Osgoode Professional Development’s education program, 3rd Annual Recent Developments and Complex Issues in Child and Spousal Support, held October 7th, 2013).

Julie Hannaford and Jennifer Bergman, “General Rules for Conducting Family Law Motions” (Prepared for The Advocates’ Society’s education program, Conduct of the Family Law Motion, held April 3, 2013).

Julie Hannaford and Jennifer Bergman, “Motions for Disclosure from Non-Parties” (Prepared for The Law Society of Upper Canada’s education program, Property Issues in Family Law – Part 2, held March 20, 2013).

Research Interests
Criminal Law 
Family Law
Feminist Analysis of Law
Health Law
Supervisor
Committee Members
Ellen Berrey, Department of Sociology, University of Toronto

Registration - LSP workshop: The Future of Law: AI, machine-learning, and you

Use the form below to register for the following Leadership Skills Program workshop:

The Future of Law: AI, machine-learning, and you
Tuesday February 26, 12:30 – 2:00
Presenter: Benjamin Alarie
Location  J130

Registration - LSP workshop: Personal Productivity for the 21st Century Lawyer

Use the form below to register for the following Leadership Skills Program workshop:

Personal Productivity for the 21st Century Lawyer
Tuesday January 29th, 12:30 – 2:00
Presenter: Doug Heidebrecht
Location  J130

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