Study Hall opens at the Bora Laskin Law library

Tuesday, February 16, 2016
study space in Bora Laskin Law library

Photo credit: Kyle Kirkup

It's a room with a view in the newly renovated Bora Laskin Library. As library staff continue to move in all the items, a few students dropped by this snowy, wintry Tuesday to study during Reading Week. The library move-in continues, and Student Services is scheduled to transition next into the Jackman Law Building. Stay tuned for more details as they are confirmed.

Post your photos on social media and tag us @UTLaw!

The Future Frontiers of Online Privacy

Friday, February 12, 2016

CILP symposium looked at legal solutions in an increasingly social world

By Mark Witten

Headnotes - Feb 8 2016

Announcements

Deans' Offices

2016 Toronto Courthouse Series

 

The upcoming 2016 Courthouse Series will take place at The Advocates’ Society Education Centre located at 250 Yonge St., Suite 2700, Toronto, on February 23, 2016.

Delivered in eleven cities across the province, the Courthouse Series is presented annually by The Advocates’ Society, in connection with local law associations. To help mark this annual celebration of advocacy, The Advocates' Society is pleased to offer complimentary registration for up to 5 University of Toronto students who are enrolled in or have completed courses or moots in civil procedure.

This year’s series, Discovery Skills Win at Trial, will feature an outstanding cast of experienced advocates and judges sharing practical strategies for effective advocacy. Dynamic live and video demonstrations will showcase a variety of advocacy styles on this year’s topic. Please see the attached flyer for further details. 

Any students who would like to take advantage of this unique opportunity to learn and network with leading members of the local bar and bench, please send an email to deansoffice.law@utoronto.ca.

Academic Events

Goodman Lecture--February 9th at 4:10 PM in EM 001

Former three-term National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, Phil Fontaine will deliver the Goodman Lecture, "Moving Forward:  Towards Reconciliation," at 4:10 pm on February 9th, 2016 in Emmanuel College, Room 001.  Chief Fontaine is an articulate advocate for indigenous peoples. He has a proven track record of opening the lines of communication and bringing people together in a common cause for a better future and to resolve issues of the past.

Fontaine, the youngest son in an Ojibway family of 12 children, has been instrumental in facilitating change and advancement for First Nations people from the time he was first elected to public office as chief, when he was 28 years old.

An advocate for human rights and a survivor of residential school abuse, Fontaine’s crowning achievement is the residential schools settlement. At $5.6billion in individual compensation, Fontaine negotiated the largest settlement in Canadian history – for the largest human rights violation in Canadian history – arising out of the 150-year Indian residential school tragedy.

Thinking on ISIS: An Open Forum (note change of location)

Thinking on ISIS: An Open Forum

Date: Feb 11th, 12:30-2pm

Location: EM119

Recent events in the Middle East—in particular the rise of ISIS in Syria and Iraq—coupled with the terrorist attacks in Paris and California have stirred considerable debate about Islam, and stoked concerns about security, law, and international affairs. This Open Forum offers members of the Law School community a chance to ask questions about and "think on" ISIS to reflect on our contemporary legal, political, and cultural landscape. 

Law and Economics Workshop: Anthony Casey

LAW & ECONOMICS WORKSHOP

presents

Anthony Casey
University of Chicago Law School

Bankruptcy on the Side

Tuesday, February 9, 2016
4:10 - 5:45
Solarium (Room FA2), Falconer Hall
84 Queen's Park

Anthony Casey graduated from Georgetown University in 1999 magna cum laude with an AB in economics and government and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He then attended the Law School, receiving his JD with high honors in 2002. He was the recipient of the John M. Olin Prize and a member of the Law Review and the Order of the Coif. After law school, Anthony clerked for then-Chief Judge Joel M. Flaum of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. From 2004 to 2006, Anthony worked as an associate in the Litigation Department at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz in New York. There, his practice focused on transaction and takeover litigation, white-collar investigations, and securities litigation. Anthony then moved to Kirkland & Ellis in Chicago, where he added the areas of bankruptcy litigation and complex class actions to his practice. He became a partner at Kirkland & Ellis in 2008.  Before joining the faculty in 2011, Anthony taught at the Law School as a Bigelow Fellow and Lecturer in Law.  Anthony’s research and teaching interests include corporations, corporate bankruptcy and reorganization, finance, securities regulation, civil procedure, and law and economics


For more workshop information, please contact Nadia Gulezko at n.gulezko@utoronto.ca.

 

Critical Analysis of Law Workshop: Ronald Niezen

Critical Analysis of Law Workshop Series

presents 

Ronald Niezen
McGill University Faculty of Law 

Templates and Exclusions in Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission
on Indian Residential Schools

 Tuesday, February 9, 2016
12:30 – 2:00
Solarium (room FA2), Falconer Hall
84 Queen’s Park 

The Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) of Canada on Indian Residential Schools, released in early June 2015, provides us with a reconsideration of the history of the state in the light of Survivor experience. The statements from former students offered in this context put into relief the suffering and memories of assault and torture of children.  This has resulted in widespread recognition of the need for changes to Aboriginal policies and to institutional practices in such areas as child welfare and criminal justice.  The weak mandate of the commission, however, favored the expression of a certain type of voluntary testimony, thereby shaping the dominant narratives of trauma, institutional crime, and national history in a way that misinforms as much as it enlightens. Its essentialization of testimony leads me to question the ability of the TRC to effectively reveal the diversity and dynamics of the residential schools, the reasons for their establishment, the causes of the corruption of their goals, and the common features they might have with ongoing, enduring forms of abuse and institutional power.

Ronald Niezen holds the Katharine A. Pearson Chair in Civil Society and Public Policy in the faculties of Law and of Arts, a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in the Anthropology of Law, and is a Professor and former Chair of the Department of Anthropology.  Professor Niezen researches and teaches in the areas of political and legal anthropology, indigenous peoples and human rights. He is an anthropologist with wide ranging research experience: with the Songhay of Mali, the Cree communities of Quebec, Ontario and Manitoba, and the Sami of northern Europe.   Professor Niezen has taught legal anthropology and anthropological theory at the Faculty of Law and the Anthropology Department of McGill University. He has taught for nine years at Harvard University and held visiting positions at the Department of History at the University of Winnipeg and the Institute for Human Rights at Åbo Akademi University, Finland.  Professor Niezen earned his B.A. in Anthropology at the University of British Columbia. He completed his M.Phil. and Ph.D. at the University of Cambridge, England.  His research has been funded notably by the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Canadian Research Chair programme and the Canadian Foundation for Innovation, Infrastructure Fund.  His most recent books are The Origins of Indigenism: Human Rights and the Politics of Difference (University of California Press, 2003), A World Beyond Difference: Cultural Identity in the Age of Globalization (Blackwell, 2004), The Rediscovered Self: Indigenous Identity and Cultural Justice (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2009), Public Justice and the Anthropology of Law(Cambridge University Press, 2010) and Truth and Indignation: Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Indian Residential Schools (University of Toronto Press, October 2013). 

A light lunch will be provided. 

 

For more workshop information, please contact Nadia Gulezko at n.gulezko@utoronto.ca

Volunteers Needed - Symposium on The State of Canada's Constitutional Democracy

The David Asper Centre for Constitutional Rights, University of Toronto and the Centre for Constitutional Studies, University of Alberta, are looking for volunteers to assist in a symposium examining the state of Canada’s constitutional democracy. The symposium will take place on Friday, February 26 and Saturday, February 27 at Victoria College. For more information on the symposium, please see the attached file. 

Volunteers are needed to assist with registration and to take notes on each day's proceedings. This is an excellent opportunity to learn more about recent changes in the day-to-day functioning of Canada's constitutional democracy and hear from some leaders in the field. It is not necessary to be available all day or for both days in order to volunteer. 

If you are interested in volunteering, please contact Debbie Boswell at d.boswell@mail.utoronto.ca with your name and availability on Friday, February 26 and Saturday, February 27. Thank you! 

Health Law, Ethics & Policy Seminar Series: Frank Pasquale

HEALTH LAW, ETHICS & POLICY SEMINAR SERIES 

presents 

Frank Pasquale
Professor, Francis King Carey School of Law
University of Maryland 

Human Automation:  The Future Logic of Medical Professionalism 

Commentator: 

Michael Da Silva
 SJD Candidate, University of Toronto Faculty of Law and
Canadian Institutes of Health Research Vanier Canada Graduate Scholar 

12:30 – 2:00
Thursday, February 11, 2016
Solarium (room FA2) – Falconer Hall
84 Queen’s Park 

Professor Pasquale’s presentation will be by video-conferencing 

Frank Pasquale’s research addresses the challenges posed to information law by rapidly changing technology, particularly in the health care, internet, and finance industries. He is a member of the NSF-funded Council for Big Data, Ethics, and Society, and an Affiliate Fellow of Yale Law School’s Information Society Project.  He frequently presents on the ethical, legal, and social implications of information technology for attorneys, physicians, and other health professionals. His book The Black Box Society: The Secret Algorithms that Control Money and Information (Harvard University Press, 2015) develops a social theory of reputation, search, and finance.  Pasquale has been a Visiting Fellow at Princeton’s Center for Information Technology, and a Visiting Professor at Yale Law School and Cardozo Law School. He was a Marshall Scholar at Oxford University. He has testified before the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives, appearing with the General Counsels of Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo. He has also presented before a Department of Health & Human Services/Federal Trade Commission Roundtable and panels of the National Academy of Sciences. He served on an American Academy of Arts and Sciences working group on the future of mobile health (mHealth) regulation.  He has received a commission from Triple Canopy to write and present on the political economy of automation.  Pasquale serves on the Advisory Boards of the Data Competition Institute, Patient Privacy Rights and the Electronic Privacy Information Center. He is is on the editorial boards of the Journal of Legal Education and the Oxford Handbooks Online in Law. He has served on the executive board of the Health Law Section of the American Association of Law Schools (AALS), and has served as chair of the AALS section on Privacy and Defamation. He has been quoted in the Financial Times, New York Times, Economist, CNN, and many other media outlets. 

Joint seminar with the Centre for Innovation Law and Policy

A light lunch will be served.


For more workshop information, please contact Nadia Gulezko at n.gulezko@utoronto.ca.

 

Student Activities

Pizza, Movie, Talk: "Elite Squad"
The GLSA invites all to watch a movie and have a light talk about it afterwards.
This screening of "Elite Squad" will be hosted by Prof. Mariana Prado.
Pizza and good times are guaranteed.
Synopsis: The captain (Wagner Moura) of a special Brazilian police force considers which of two new recruits (André Ramiro, Caio Junqueira) would make a suitable successor.
 
When: Feb 9th, 6.10 pm
Where: Falconer Hall - Solarium
NEW: Law and Economics Reading Group

 The first meeting of the Law and Economics Reading Group run by graduate students will take place on February 10, at 12.30, room FA1

The group will meet with Professor Bruce Chapman to discuss his paper “Economic Analysis of Law and the Value of Efficiency” published in Aristides N. Hatzis ed. Economic Analysis of Law: A European Perspective (Cheltenham, U.K.: Elgar 2014).

All students are welcome to join!

For more info, email: francesco.ducci@mail.utoronto.ca

TIP Group: Norton Rose Fulbright Speaker

Description: Anthony de Fazekas, a partner and patent agent at Norton Rose Fulbright, will discuss his practice. Mr. de Fazekas practices in the area of information technology law and has expertise in supporting the commercialization of innovative technologies. A sandwich lunch will be provided.

Date: Tues. Feb. 9, 2016

Time:12:30 pm – 2:00 pm

Location: VC 211

Tax Law Society: Base Erosion and Profiting Shifting Panel Discussion

Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) is a topic of interest in international corporate tax planning. The Tax Law Society is hosting a panel on the topic featuring Professor Benjamin Alarie, Scott Wilkie, a partner at Blake, Cassels & Graydon, and Willard Taylor, Visiting Professor and partner at Sullivan & Cromwell. The panel will give an overview of BEPS, present case studies on Apple, Google, and Starbucks, and conclude with recommendations to mitigate the adverse effects of this tax planning strategy.

The panel will take place on Tuesday, February 23 from 5pm-7pm in Emmanuel 119. A reception will follow the discussion. The panel is geared towards all students interested in international tax planning, corporate law, or tax policy in general. 

Health Law Club - In-Firm Meeting at Lerners

Interested in the practicing health law?

Join the Health Law Club at Lerners LLP for the chance to meet with several lawyers in one of the most well-established health law practices in Toronto. 

Lerners Health Law Group is comprised of experienced and skilled lawyers recognized as leading advocates on behalf of regulated health professionals and health-related facilities in all areas of health law.

Lunch will be provided.

Date: Thursday, February 25
Time: 12:45-2:00pm
Location: Lerners LLP, 2400 – 130 Adelaide Street West

Spaces are limited, please RSVP to amanda.nash@mail.utoronto.ca to confirm your attendance. Please mention any dietary restrictions.

Health Law Club: Carter v Canada Discussion Panel

Health Law Club: Carter v Canada Discussion Panel

WHEN: March 8 from 12:30 – 2:00PM

WHERE: FA2 - Solarium  

Please join the Health Law Club for our upcoming panel on the Supreme Court’s Carter v Canada ruling on physician-assisted dying. Our three panelists are Zachary Green (Counsel for the Intervener the Attorney General of Ontario), Professor Trudo Lemmens and Jack Pasht (Vice Chair of Dying with Dignity).

Discussion will address the key points and impact of the decision, the challenges ahead in drafting the new legislation, the government’s approach thus far, and the additional suspension of the declaration of invalidity.

Lunch will be provided.

Litigation Association Panel

The Litigation Association is hosting a panel of UofT Law graduates practicing as litigators. Students will have the opportunity to explore careers in litigation, ask litigators about the recruitment process and learn about litigation at a variety of Toronto firms.

The event will take place from 12:30-1:50pm in VIC (more specific details to come). Lunch will be provided. Please join our Facebook event for more information and updates: https://www.facebook.com/events/504813806368111/

 

Asian Canadian Law Students Conference
Join us for the 12th annual Asian Canadian Law Students Conference, "Navigating New Horizons", and learn about practicing on Bay Street, explore alternative career paths, network with industry leaders, and stay updated on current Asian-Canadian legal developments!

The Asian Canadian Law Students Conference is an annual conference organized by ALS in collaboration with the Asian Law Students of Osgoode and the Korean Law Students Association of Osgoode. It is one of the few conferences jointly hosted by students from Osgoode Hall Law School and U of T Faculty of Law.

This year’s conference features the Honourable Justice Shaun Nakatsuru as the keynote speaker, as well as six panels (and over 20 expert panelists) designed to enable participants to gain valuable insight, knowledge, and relationship within the realm of legal practice and beyond.
 
For more information such as program and the full list of speakers, please visit our official website: http://aclsc2016.wix.com/2016
 
Early Bird Price: $15 (Expires Feb 12, 2016)
Regular Price: $20
 

Centres, Legal Clinics, and Special Programs

Law in Action Within Schools (LAWS) - Volunteers Needed

Hi everyone, 

Law in Action Within Schools (LAWS) is currently looking for first and upper year law students to volunteer with our program!

Our high school LAWS students are currently preparing for a mock trial tournament at the Superior Court of Justice and we need you, mock trial coaches! Coaching takes place on Wednesdays from 3:30 - 5:30 pm at Harbord Collegiate Institute - a short walk away from campus. 

This is a great  opportunity to volunteer with local Toronto youth who are engaging with social justice issues and are looking for law student mentors.  

If you're interested please contact LAWS Coordinator, Justin Khan, on jkhan@lawinaction.ca or 647-880-2323

Thanks!  

Career Development Office and Employment Opportunities

Summer research assistance, Professor Stephen Waddams and Justice Robert Sharpe

Professor Stephen Waddams and Justice Robert Sharpe are looking for assistance in updating their books on Injunctions and Specific Performance, Damages, and Contracts.  Please apply before February 29, by letter, including details of academic record, to Professor Waddams (paper copy, please, to the law school) and simultaneously to The Hon. Justice R. J. Sharpe, e-mail: robert.sharpe@oca-cao.ca.  

CDO EVENT FOR ALL STUDENTS: Faculty Interview Preparation Program
Date:  Friday, February 12, 2016 - 12:30pm to 2:00pm
Location:  Falconer Hall, Solarium

Please register for this program under the "events" tab of www.utlawcareers.ca.

Please join upper year students as we discuss the Faculty positions which require interviews in the Faculty Unified Hiring Process.  This session will offer a brief presentation explaining the interview process for Faculty roles and then upper year students will discuss their experiences working for DLS, LAWS, PBSC, the Asper Centre and as a Casebook Research Assistant. If you have applied to any of these roles, this is the session for you.

For further information on this program, please contact ann.vuletin@utoronto.ca.

Summer RA Position - Professor Dawood

 

 

Professor Yasmin Dawood will be hiring a full-time summer research assistant to help with various projects in election law and constitutional law. The candidate should have strong research and writing skills. If you are interested in the position, please forward a cover letter, cv and law school transcript to Prof. Dawood’s assistant Vanessa Zhang at vanessaz.zhang@utoronto.ca by Friday, February 26, 2016.

CDO EVENT FOR 1L STUDENTS: First Year Student Experiences Session
Date:  Wednesday, February 10, 2016 - 12:30pm to 2:00pm
Location:  Victoria College, Room 206

Please RSVP for this program under the "events" tab of www.utlawcareers.ca.

Join the Business Law Society and the CDO to learn about 1L opportunities post the Toronto and Faculty recruitment processes. This session is for first year students who want to hear about great opportunities to work in business law, other practice areas and public interest roles.

The session will commence with a brief presentation on strategies for seeking out interesting 1L summer opportunities. Second year students who worked in amazing 1L summer roles will then speak about their experiences obtaining a position from and working for an employer who hired outside the recruitment processes.

For more information about this program please contact ann.vuletin@utoronto.ca.

CDO EVENT FOR ALL STUDENTS: Practice Area Primer - Alternatives to Big Law
Date:  Friday, January 29, 2016 - 4:25pm
Location:  Victoria College, Room 206

Please RSVP for this program under the "events" tab of www.utlawcareers.ca.

In its report entitled "The Future of Legal Services in Canada: Trends and Issues", the Canadian Bar Association notes that "Lawyers, law firms, and the overall legal industry in Canada will be facing a complex and compelling set of challenges over the next decade as they endeavour to remain viable, competitive and relevant in the face of a wave of fundamental change." Indeed, Canada and other countries around the world have already begun to witness the development of innovative models to legal practice and law firms. Interestingly, these models provide value and innovation not only to the clients they serve, but are responsive to a growing demand among lawyers to balance fulfilling and demanding work with -- life.

This program will provide students with the opportunity to hear from four innovative law firms and the lawyers that practice with them. The speakers will describe their model, how it came to be developed, and the differences between practicing at a "Big Law" firm and with them.

Students who want to know more about the many ways in which one can have a successful (well paid) career off Bay Street are encouraged to attend.

For more information, please contact ann.vuletin@utoronto.ca.

This Week on UTLawcareers

Please find attached a list of the 1L, 2L and 3L/4L employment opportunities which are currently available on www.utlawcareers.ca.

For more information on these postings, please contact ann.vuletin@utoronto.ca.

Journals, Research, and Scholarship

9th Annual Toronto Group Conference - Call for Proposals Deadline March 1, 2016

We are pleased to present the 9th Annual Conference of the Toronto Group for the study of International, Transnational and Comparative Law, which will be held on May 6, 2016 at Osgoode Hall Law School, Toronto, Canada. The Toronto Group is a collaborative project between graduate students at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law and Osgoode Hall Law School. This year’s topic is “From the Local to the Global: The Evolving Role of Transnational Adjudication.” Participants are invited to conceptualize, criticize, and examine the notion of adjudication from various perspectives. Please send 300-500 word abstract submissions and any inquiries by e-mail to torontogroupconference@gmail.com by March 1, 2016

Bookstore

Bookstore

Hours for the week of February 8th, 2016 

The Bookstore will be CLOSED during Reading Week, February 15-19, 2016. 

                   Monday:             9:30 a.m.     3:30 p.m.
                   Tuesday:                      CLOSED
                   Wednesday:       9:30 a.m.   –   3:30 p.m.
                   Thursday:           9:30 a.m.   –   2:00 p.m.
                    Friday:                          CLOSED

    For updated information and for all price lists, please remember to check the Faculty of Law Bookstore website at: 

http://www.law.utoronto.ca/student-life/bookstore

External Announcements: Events

2016 Toronto Courthouse Series

The Advocates' Society invites you to join them for this year's Courthouse Series: Discovery Skills Win at Trial.

Tuesday, February 23, 2016, 12.00 p.m. - 4.30 p.m.
The Advocates' Society Education Centre
2700-250 Yonge Street, Toronto

Regional Chairs:
Sandra L. Barton
Alf Kwinter
Barbara J. Murchie

Local Chairs:
Sandra Barton
J. Thomas Curry

Hear directly from judges and leading practitioners on how to effectively conduct an examination for discovery and then successfully use the discovery transcript at trial.

To register, please see the attached registration form.

Hart House Hancock Lecture with Azeezah Kanji, JD 2013
Hart House Hancock Lecture with Azeezah Kanji, JD 2013

How do we reconcile the perception of Canada as a welcoming and inclusive nation with the direction of its policies?

 
The reform of citizenship law and the surveillance of "anti-Canadian values" were among the previous government's attempts to to contour Canadian citizenship in the post 9/11 world, yet these policies also connect to a long-standing tradition of marginalization in Canada.

 

As Canadians are ushered into a new era of "sunny ways," how will the newly elected administration respond to the underrepresented voices and experiences of everyday citizens affected by public security policies?


Join us for the 15th Anniversary of the Hancock Lecture with Azeezah Kanji, lawyer, columnist and social commentator, and take part in a timely conversation which has galvanized Canadians and policymakers, and influenced the outcome of the 2015 federal election.    


When
: Tues., Feb. 9, 2016, 7 pm 

Where: Hart House Theatre

Cost: Free with valid Student ID / $10 for non-students / Reserve your seats online!

The lecture will be followed by a reception, as well as an in-depth discussion and Q&A moderated by award-winning journalist and social activist, Desmond Cole.

For more information on the Hancock lecture and related programming, please visit www.harthouse.ca/hancock.

Movie Night - Ontario Bar Association Women Lawyers Forum

Join us for a private screening of ANITA. This documentary depicts Anita Hill’s brave testimony in 1991, which uncovers her experience with sexual harassment in the workplace while working with Clarence Thomas, a U.S. Supreme Court nominee. Watch the trailer here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=h_Yg2monvw4

Following the movie, attend a Q&A session that will be moderated by Dr. Patricia McDermott, Associate Professor at the School of Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies at York University. Food and drinks will be provided.  We hope to see you there!

You can register for this event here: http://cbapd.org/details_en.aspx?id=ON_16WLF0224T

Ontario Bar Association (OBA) offers free membership for all law students. As a student member of the OBA, you will gain access to unique membership benefits and discounts, as well as leadership and networking opportunities. For more information about how to get your OBA membership, visit: http://www.oba.org/Membership/Law-Students

Centre for Ethics: Inaugural Ethics Hour Speaker Series - Prof. Jennifer Nedelsky, "(Part)-Time for All: Generating New Norms of Work and Care"

(Part)-Time for All: Generating New Norms of Work and Care

 

Jennifer Nedelsky

Faculty of Law and Department of Political Science, UofT

 

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

12 noon – 1:30 pm

 

Room 200, Second Floor, Larkin Building

15 Devonshire Place

 

The talk will present the chapter on care from my book manuscript, (Part)-Time for All: Generating New Norms of Work and Care.  The project addresses three critical problems that arise out of dysfunctional norms of work and care: unsustainable stress on families, persistent inequality for women and others who do care work, and policy makers who are ignorant about the care work that life requires. My argument is that the new norms should be 12-30 hours of unpaid care from everybody, along with 12-30 hours of paid work. The claim is that only a radical transformation of the structures of work and care can solve all of these critical problems. The objective of the book is to generate lively public conversation that moves the current “work-family balance” discussion onto the terrain of the kind of fundamental change that can actually address the problems. The project is also an exploration of the relation between norms, policy and law, since its primary focus is on the generation of new norms, with secondary attention (in the chapter on work) to the kinds of law and policy that would facilitate the norm transformation. It presents an argument about the inevitably coercive force of norms, and thus the importance of democratic deliberation about norms. Existing norms organize the distribution of care around hierarchies of gender, race, class, and citizenship status. Both the work of care and the people who do it are denigrated. To achieve an equal society, the distribution of care must be just and equal. Only a radical restructuring of norms can achieve this, and because the structures of work and care are so fully intertwined, norms around both work and care must be transformed. The chapter explores some of the details of what new norms of care would look like.

“After Paris: New Thinking for A New Way Forward” A Conversation with Canada’s Environment and Climate Change Minister

“After Paris – A Conversation with Catherine McKenna,” at the Campbell Conference Facility Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2:30-4:00. Location: The Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, Munk School of Global Affairs, 1 Devonshire Place

 

Anyone can attend, but registration is required (likely to fill up fast): http://munkschool.utoronto.ca/events/

To watch the live webcast of the event, click here: http://hosting2.desire2learncapture.com/MUNK/1/live/368.aspx

Meet Jane Doe - speaking on the topic of women and the justice system on Wednesday, February 10th

Jane Doe (of the infamous 1986 sexual assault case and subsequent lawsuit that changed Canadian law and policing) will be speaking on the topic of women and the justice system on Wednesday, February 10th.

The talkback will be held in the theatre immediately following the performance of “The Trial of Judith K.” and is included in that evening’s ticket.

Venue: 
Theatre Passe Muraille Backspace, 16 Ryerson Ave, Toronto.
Performance begins at 7:30pm. Talkback to follow.

Tickets:
Regular $30 / Students & Arts Workers $25
via www.artsboxoffice.ca416-504-7529

 About Jane Doe

After she was sexually assaulted at knifepoint, Jane Doe discovered that the police were aware of a serial rapist active in her neighbourhood, but failed to warn the public for fear of causing panic among women. After her attacker was caught and convicted (largely due to Jane’s community organization efforts that police tried to prevent out of concern of “spooking” the rapist) Jane Doe sued the Toronto police on three separate grounds: negligence, a violation of her equality rights under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and an infringement of her Charter right to security of the person. On July 3, 1998, Madam Justice MacFarland ruled in her favour on all three counts.

Her case spent 11 years in trial and changed the way sexual assault is dealt with by the police and the justice system. Her landmark case also shifted the public discourse around rape culture and misogyny.

http://thought4food.ca/speaker-series/

External Announcements: Opportunities

Toronto Lawyers Association-more opportunities for students

Law school students can become Friends of the Toronto Lawyers Association, at no charge.  The TLA invites you to become a friend and enjoy the benefits.

 

Once you have registered you will receive regular communication from the TLA, in which you will:

  • Find out about upcoming education programs, called Nutshells, which you can attend free of charge.  We have some informative Nutshells planned for 2016.  Hope to see your there.
  • Learn about social events and networking opportunities
  • Hear more about the TLA Career Centre
  • Find out about future mentoring activities

 

Of interest to you will be the Court House Library at 361 University Ave.  Services include:

  • Professional library staff who can assist with legal research, Monday – Friday, 9 am to 5 pm.   
  • LexisNexis Quicklaw, Lexis Practice Advisor, Divorcemate and a whole host of other print and e-book resources are available in the library. 

 

Please feel free to contact us, or better yet drop by for a chat and see what we have to offer.

External Announcements: Calls for Papers

Publication Opportunity - Genocide Studies and Prevention

Genocide Studies & Prevention, an international, peer-reviewed, open-access journal, is currently accepting submissions. The journal accepts articles addressing intersections between genocide or mass violence and policy, research, and theory from various disciplines, including history, political science, sociology, psychology, international law, criminal justice, gender studies, religion, philosophy, literature, anthropology, museology, and visual and performance arts and history.

The journal is also actively seeking papers related to specific topics, such as atrocity prevention, listed on the journal's call for papers webpage: http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gsp/call_for_papers.html.

For further information, including detailed submission guidelines and instructions, please visit the journal's home page: http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gsp/

External Announcements: Other

Student Engagement in the Arts Awards Nominations Now Open

It is once again time to recognize the tremendous contributions made by University of Toronto students to our creative and performing arts communities on all three campuses.

 

The U of T Student Engagement in the Arts Awards were introduced in 2010 to mark the outstanding leadership roles undertaken by students in all aspects of co-curricular arts and creative endeavours. If you know a student who has developed a community arts program; curated an art show, film festival or open mic night; someone who’s edited a magazine or book of poetry; produced a musical, play, speakers series – you get the idea! We hope you will consider nominating them for a U of T Student Engagement in the Arts Award. 

 

Nominations are open until February 22, 2016. 

 

Learn more and get the nomination form http://www.arts.utoronto.ca/engagementawards.htm.

Late announcements

PMP Hot Chocolate
The PMP is helping keep you warm with hot chocolate!
 
Come on out on MONDAY, February 29th @ 1 - 2pm, in front of Birge Carnegie Reading Room!  This is a great chance for those of you to pick up your Starbucks cards if you haven't already... see you there!

 

 

Cultural Night

Please join us on Monday, March 21 for a tour of the Art Collection at Faskens Martineau. Brief remarks from Dean Edward Iacobucci will be followed by hors d’oeuvres and beverages.

Registration is now closed.

Perspectives on the Future of Charter Litigation in Canada: A Fireside Chat with Raj Anand & David Asper - RSVP Page

Please join us on Wednesday, November 23 for a fireside chat with Raj Anand and David Asper as they discuss the effect of the change in government on Charter rights and specifically what the anticipated reinstatement of the court challenges program means for charter litigation in Canada.  

Moderated by the Asper Centre’s Executive Director Cheryl Milne and brief remarks from Dean Edward Iacobucci.

Please feel free to pass this on to colleagues for whom you think this would be of interest to.

RSVP Here:

SJD student Nathan Gorham writes "Twitter doesn’t do the Ghomeshi trial justice. There’s a better alternative"

Thursday, February 4, 2016

In a commentary in the Globe and Mail, SJD student Nathan Gorham argues that the public discussion created by the Ghomeshi trial would be better served if everyone who wanted to could watch trials being broadcast rather than having to rely on second-hand accounts ("Twitter doesn’t do the Ghomeshi trial justice. There’s a better alternative," February 3, 2016).

2016 Literary Moot put Iago on trial, and raised more than $3K for charity

Monday, February 1, 2016

Iago on Trial: (back row, from left) Dean Ed Iacobucci, Prof. Brenda Cossman, Lauren Posloski and Prof. Anthony Niblett with (front row) Prof. Martha Shaffer and Angela Chaisson.

 

By Maeve Chandler, 2L  /  Photography by Kara Dueck

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