Message from the University regarding the Coronavirus (COVID-19)

Monday, March 16, 2020

Coronavirus (COVID-19) and U of T's response

Find the most up date University notice and FAQ at www.utoronto.ca/message-from-the-university-regarding-the-coronavirus

Starting Monday, March 16, Faculty of Law classes will be delivered online until the scheduled end of classes on Friday, April 9, 2020.

U of T cancels in-person classes on all three campuses due to COVID-19 outbreak

Saturday, March 14, 2020

Starting Monday, March 16, classes will be delivered online until the scheduled end of classes on Friday, April 9, 2020. Students will receive information specific to their program. Visit the university FAQ for more information. 

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The University of Toronto will cancel all in-person undergraduate courses, as well as research-stream masters and doctoral courses, across its three campuses from March 16 to April 3 in response to the outbreak of COVID-19 in Canada and around the globe.

GPLLM student Crystal Hyunju Park recognized for commitment to access to justice

Thursday, March 12, 2020

The Right Honourable Richard Wagner, P.C., Chief Justice of Canada, Crystal Hyunju Park and Brittany Twiss, PBSC National Director (photo Kenya-Jade Pinto)

The Right Honourable Richard Wagner, P.C., Chief Justice of Canada, Crystal Hyunju Park and Brittany Twiss, PBSC National Director (photo Kenya-Jade Pinto)

Headnotes - Mar 12 2020

Announcements

Deans' Offices

Future of Law: Artificial Intelligence and the Law - Real Benefits and Challenges

Future of Law:  Artificial Intelligence and the Law-- Real Benefits and Challenges
Wednesday March 18, 12:30-2pm
Location J125
Presenter: Prof. Maura Grossman

This workshop will cover how machine learning and deep learning work, provide an overview of legal AI products currently on the market, and explore some of the benefits and challenges lawyers can expect to face as AI applications continue to proliferate.

By attending this workshop you will:

  • Learn what artificial intelligence is and what it can do
  • Understand some of the ethical and other issues raised by algorithms, including:  bias; threats to privacy and security; transparency and explainibility; accountability and liability issues;
  • Explore the employment implications anticipated as a result of the fourth industrial revolution.

Register https://www.law.utoronto.ca/academic-programs/jd-program/workshops-and-registration

Date of event:
Wed. Mar. 18, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
J125
Event conditions:
Registration required
Academic Success Program (Winter 2020)
The Academic Success Program matches 1L students who would like academic assistance in their classes with an upper year student who has demonstrated academic excellence in the first year curriculum. This is a free and confidential service. Students may access the program as individuals or in small study groups. Please note there is a maximum of three appointments per student per semester. If you have made three appointments last semester, you are welcome to sign up for three more this semester. You can sign up at any time throughout the semester to request some assistance in any class.
To request an appointment, please fill out this form: https://forms.gle/qeJigKkweaV8nb5z6 (This is an updated link from last semester)
 
Please direct any questions to academic.support@utoronto.ca
Lawyers Doing Cool Things - Josh Stark, J.D. 2013

Career profile: Josh is a co-founder of ETHGlobal and L4, two companies that he continues to operate which provide services to the Ethereum cryptocurrency industry. He also works for the Ethereum Foundation, where he manages several special projects ranging from operations, growth, investor relations, and communications. Prior to his work in the Ethereum ecosystem, Josh articled at a Toronto corporate firm, and graduated from the Faculty in 2013.

To register, click here.

Date of event:
Mon. Mar. 23, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
Flv. 219
Event conditions:
Registration required

Student Office

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 12th – 13th and March 16th – 20th.

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 password to login with

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

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

LSAT Instructor summer position(s) at UofT Law

PAID SUMMER JOB

The Faculty of Law is looking to hire one person full-time or two persons part-time, who are dynamic, engaging presenters with a proven ability to motivate others to run its law school preparatory program for low-income students. As the LSAT Instructor you will be responsible for providing exceptional instruction to large classes of 25 participants each, and demonstrating subject matter expertise on all things related to the LSAT.

ELIGIBILITY

You must have an official LSAT score at or above the 90th percentile. A strong preference will be given to candidates with experience as an LSAT instructor or tutor.

MAIN DUTIES

The instructor will be responsible for updating the current, and developing new, LSAT course materials, and for delivering the course in its entirety at the law school and at a law firm in downtown Toronto from May 1st to August 28th (16 weeks).

The class times will be arranged with the instructor, who should plan for providing instruction at weekday evening classes and/or weekday daytime classes from May 4th to August 20th.

The instructor will also need to be available for additional mentoring, classroom prep time, mock testing time on one weekend day, and responding to student emails (which can be done flexibly in order to accommodate other commitments).

The pay is tentatively at $16/hr, plus 4% vacation pay.

HOW TO APPLY & APPLICATION DEADLINE

Email: 

  1. A statement of interest, specifying any LSAT tutoring/teaching experience
  2. Your LSAT candidate report showing your score
  3. A resume

to the JD Admissions Office at admissions.law@utoronto.ca
by end of day Thursday, March 19th.

Academic Events

Legal Theory Workshop - Julie Saada

Legal Theory Workshop

Presents:

Julie Saada
Ecole de droit/Sciences Po Law School, Paris, France

Against just war theories?
Rousseau, the law of war, and political modernity.

Friday March 13, 2020
12:30pm -2:00pm
Falconer Hall, 84 Queen's Park
Room: Solarium(FA2)

Julie Saada (Agrégation, PhD and Habilitation, Ecole Normale Supérieure of Lyon, 2004, 2013) is Professor of Philosophy at Sciences Po Law School, Paris, France. She is an Alliance Visiting Professor (Spring 2020). Her research focuses on the history and ethics of war and postwar justice, as well as the history and philosophy of international law and Human Rights. Professor Saada’s areas of interest are also modern and contemporary political philosophy and critical legal theory.

For further workshop information contact events.law@utoronto.ca

 

Ian Waddell, QC: The Drafting of Section 35 and the Berger Inquiry

The Law and Politics Club is excited to welcome Ian Waddell, QC to the law school. Ian is a former Member of Parliament and Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. He holds an LLM from the London School of Economics and and LLB from the University of Toronto. His complete CV, for those interested, can be found here: https://tinyurl.com/u3zoc9e

Ian was instrumental in the drafting of Section 35 of the Canadian Constitution, and will comment on its inception and development. He will also discuss his important role in as Counsel to the Berger Inquiry, and much much more. Let us know if you have any questions - we're excited to see you there!

We wish to acknowledge this land on which this session will take place. For thousands of years it has been the traditional land of the Huron-Wendat, the Seneca, and the Mississaugas of the Credit River. Today, this meeting place is still the home to many Indigenous people from across Turtle Island and we are grateful to have the opportunity to work on this land.

Seeman Health Law Seminar: Britta van Beers - Rewriting the human genome, rewriting human rights law?

Seeman Health Law Seminar

Presents:

Britta van Beers
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Rewriting the human genome, rewriting human rights law? Human rights, human dignity and human germline editing in the CRISPR era

Thursday March 12, 2020
12:30pm - 2:00pm
Falconer Hall
84 Queen's Park
Solarium (FA2)

In most legal orders, heritable genome editing is either prohibited or severely restricted. A recurring thought in these legal frameworks is that heritable genome editing would result in practices that are at odds with principles of human rights, such as dignity, justice and equality. However, now that CRISPR is bringing human germline editing within human reach, the question has risen as to whether these human rights bans still make sense. The call is growing louder to lift the ban on reproductive genome editing for therapeutic purposes as soon as the technology is safe for introduction in the clinic. This article critically examines these recent proposals from a human rights perspective. First, it examines the question as to how realistic the proposed distinction between therapeutic and non-therapeutic uses of human germline editing is in the CRISPR era. Second, it argues that these proposals rely on a one-dimensional understanding of the meaning of human rights for this issue. Finally, it suggests that this one-dimensional understanding paves the way for a regime of self-regulation by the scientific community that leaves little room for public debate on thequestion as to whether or how human germline editing fits in the long-term aspirations of society.

Britta van Beers is Professor of Law, Ethics and Biotechnology at the Department of Legal Theory of the Faculty of Law of the VU University, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. In her research and teaching she explores the legal-philosophical aspects of the regulation and governance of biomedical technologies. One of the main themes in her research concerns the legal and legal-philosophical meaning of concepts such as person, humanity and dignity. In recent work, she has focused on issues related to personalized medicine and human gene editing. Her publications include the co-edited volumes Personalised Medicine, Individual Choice and the Common Good; Symbolic Legislation and Developments in Biolaw; and Humanity across International Law and Biolaw.

For further details contact events.law@utoronto.ca

Seeman Health Law Seminar: Britta van Beers - From Medically Assisted to Algorithmically Assisted Reproduction

Presented as part of the JCB Bioethics Seminar Series and the Seeman Health Law Series:

Britta van Beers
Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam

From Medically Assisted to Algorithmically Assisted Reproduction

March 11, 2020
4:00pm - 5:30pm
Jackman Law Bulding, 78 Queen's Park
Room J130

 

R e g i s t e r  f o r  t h i s  l e c t u r e :


h t t p s : / / t i n y u r l . c o m / s q 6 6 b j u

Legal History Workshop

LEGAL HISTORY WORKSHOP

Shelley Gavigan, Osgoode Hall Law School

Improper Intimacies and Patriarchal Relations in Canada’s North-West Territories:

Methodological, Ethical, and Interpretative Challenges in the Nineteenth-Century Criminal Court Records. 

Wednesday March 11, 6.30, Betty Ho Classroom, Flavelle House

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

Health Law, Ethics & Policy Workshop Series: Britta van Beers

Health Law, Ethics & Policy Workshop Series

presents

Britta van Beers
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Advance Requests for Medical Aid in Dying and Dementia

Friday, March 13, 2020
10 AM - 1 PM
Room J125, Jackman Law Building
78 Queen's Park


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

 

Student Activities

SLS Presents Lunchtime Trivia!

We will be having lunchtime trivia every other Thursday in the Rowell Room, beginning on JANUARY 23RD. The trivia dates are as follows: January 23; January 30; February 13; February 27; March 12; March 26.

In order to be eligible for the cup, at least one team member must be in attendance at all events. However, non-competitive sporadic participation is also welcome and encouraged!

Firm Visit - Wright Henry
PLEASE SIGN UP FOR THIS FIRM VISIT HERE: https://forms.gle/LDUMfWZoh8xGPy8n8
 
We will be visiting Wright Henry to learn more about their worker- and union-side labour and employment law practice. You can learn more about the firm at https://https://wrighthenry.ca. If you have any questions for the firm, please send them at least a week ahead of the event via email to lels.utoronto@gmail.com. The address is 200 Wellington St. W., Suite 602.
Date of event:
Mon. Mar. 16, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
200 Wellington St. W., Suite 602
Event conditions:
Registration required
Firm Visit - Paliare Roland
Paliare Roland

Are you interested in litigation? Me too! Have you ever visited Paliare Roland? Me either! Let's go together!

On Thursday, March 19th @ 12:30pm the Labour and Employment Law Society will be attending a firm visit at Paliare. This is a visit for anyone interested in litigation as Paliare is NOT limited to labour and employment law. If you'd like to attend, please complete the linked Google form (if you have done so before, just fill it out again and choose ALL the firm visits you'd like to attend): https://forms.gle/jqWvyJQ3aFaymtuA8 We will send more details just before the visit. See you soon!

Date of event:
Thu. Mar. 19, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
155 Wellington St. West, 35th Floor
Event conditions:
Registration required
Social Purpose Real Estate Law Conference
This half-day conference will examine the legal, policy, and practical aspects of NPOs accessing and developing real estate with a focus on public lands while ensuring they serve public purposes in perpetuity. Drawing on experts from the public, private, and nonprofit sectors, this conference is ideal for nonprofit and government professionals trying to understand the barriers and current strategies to unlock the social purpose potential of real estate in Canada.
 
 
8:30 AM Doors Open-Light breakfast served
9:15 AM Social Purpose Real Estate 101
Featuring: Brian Iler, Iler Campbell & Ismail Ibrahim, Robins Appleby
10:30 AM Strategies for Overcoming Legal, Financial, and Practical Barriers
 Featuring: LoriAnn Gervain, ArtScape; Nancy Claridge, Carters Professional Corporation & Alfred Lee, VanCity
11:45 AM Public Lands in Public Hands-How to Ensure the Mission is Maintained
 Featuring: Claudia Pedrero, Parkdale Land Trust, George Brown, Integral North
 
This Conference is made possible by the generous support of: Iler Campbell and Carters Professional Corporation
Date of event:
Fri. Mar. 27, 2020, 8:30am
Location:
J250
Event conditions:
Registration required
Firm Visit - Ontario Nurses' Association
What's the best way to make an impact on firm recruiters? Meeting them! How can you do that? By visiting a firm!
 
Firm tours offer a special opportunity to visit a firm, meet associates and partners, and make an impression that'll be KEY come 1L, 2L and articling recruits. Plus, it gives you some amazing personal connections to play off of in your cover letter and help you stand out. Some firms are even participating in the upcoming 1L recruit - this is your best shot to get some face time with those who may eventually be hiring you!
 
The Labour and Employment Law Society will be visiting the Ontario Nurses' Association to learn more about their union law practice. You can learn more about ONA at https://www.ONA.org/. If you have any questions for the lawyers, please send them at least a week ahead of the event via email to lels.utoronto@gmail.com. The address is 85 Grenville St #400.
Date of event:
Wed. Mar. 25, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
85 Grenville St #400
Event conditions:
Registration required
Corporate Law and emerging industries: Lawyer panel focussing on esports and gaming, and blockchain, cryptocurrency and fintech

Corporate law and emerging industries: Lawyer panel focussing on esports and gaming, and blockchain, cryptocurrency and fintech

Co-hosted by Legal Hackers and Future of Law

Wednesday March 24, 12:30 – 2:00

Room J125

To register, click here

Sandwiches and water will be provided

Date of event:
Tue. Mar. 24, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
J125
Event conditions:
Registration required.
Animal Justice Student Association - Panel: Feminism and Animal Rights

Join the University of Toronto and Osgoode Hall Animal Justice Student Associations for a panel on the intersection of feminism and animal rights! Our panelists will each take 15 - 25 minutes to introduce themselves and their work followed by an interactive audience Q&A.

WHEN: 2:00PM - 4:00PM, March 20, 2020.
WHERE: Room P120, University of Toronto Faculty of Law, 78 Queens Park, Toronto, ON M5S 2C5.
REFRESHMENTS: Will be provided.

LAWYERS: Be aware that this program is eligible for up to 2 CPD Substantive Hours.

THE SPEAKERS
JESSICA EISEN is an Assistant Professor at the University of Alberta Faculty of Law. Professor Eisen obtained her JD from the University of Toronto and her LLM and SJD at Harvard Law School. Her research interests include animals and the law, constitutional and comparative constitutional law, equality and anti-discrimination law, feminist legal theory, intergenerational justice, and law and social movements.

ANDREA FREEMAN is an Associate Professor at the University of Hawaii's School of Law. Professor Freeman writes and researches at the intersection of critical race theory and food policy (food oppression), and critical race theory and consumer credit. She has presented her work at Yale Law School, Stanford Law School, Harvard Law School, Columbia Law School, and New York University, among other prestigious institutions.

ANGELA LEE is a PhD candidate at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law. Her doctoral work critically considers the intersections between new and emerging technologies; the environment; intergenerational, intragenerational, and interspecies justice; and the law, particularly in the context of food and agriculture. Her research has been published in the Dalhousie Law Journal, the University of Ottawa Law Review, the Canadian Journal of Women and the Law, and Canadian Food Studies.

Location:
Room P120
Firm Visit - AMAPCEO

PLEASE SIGN UP FOR THIS FIRM VISIT HERE: https://forms.gle/LDUMfWZoh8xGPy8n8

We will be visiting AMAPCEO to learn more about their union legal department. You can learn more about the firm at https://https://amapceo.on.ca/. If you have any questions for the firm, please send them at least a week ahead of the event via email to lels.utoronto@gmail.com. The address is 1 Dundas St W #2310.

Date of event:
Tue. Mar. 17, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
1 Dundas St W #2310
Event conditions:
Registration required
Technology & Intellectual Property Conference

Join us for a three-part panel series on March 11th, 18th, and 25th during lunch (12:30-2:00) in the Jackman Law Building. Professionals in the IP and Technology fields will gather to discuss the complex legal issues arising through the advent of Gene Editing and CRISPR Technologies, Pharmaceutical Pricing and Canadian Regulations, and the commercial impact of E-Commerce in Video and Online Gaming.

U of T Law Dodgeball tournament: March 12

On behalf of the Athletics’ Association and Out in Law

The Faculty of Law Athletic Association and Out in Law is hosting a 6 v 6 U of T Law Dodgeball tournament on Thursday March 12, 2020 from 8:00-10:00 pm at the Hart House gym. Sign up individually or with some friends (max. 6). There must be no more than 4 of every gender on one team! Get moving after all that reading you did over the break in a fun tournament where players of all skill levels are welcome. Snacks will be provided and each member of the winning team gets a prize!

Sign up here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSedY6cHSBCnUgR6JMU92PCPP_AXQu-XrnevXTtbsfpAVfDTcA/viewform

Out in Law Networking Event

University of Toronto Out in Law is excited to host a meet and mingle reception to launch our network! Our network's goals are to foster inclusion, community building, mentorship, and professional networking. We have partnered with Start Proud to bring you this networking event to meet fellow LGBTQ lawyers and law students, expand your network, foster mentorship within the community, and celebrate who we are!

Join us on March 17, 2020 at Flavelle House, 78 Queen's Park. Registration begins at 6:00 and the event starts at 6:30. Light food and non-alcoholic drinks will be provided. All LGBTQ lawyers and law students in Toronto (U of T and Osgoode) are welcome to attend. You must RSVP by March 13 at the following link to attend: https://forms.gle/MJVfuPmW2YYgpJtu8

Date of event:
Tue. Mar. 17, 2020, 6:00am
Location:
Rowell Room
Event conditions:
Registration required

Career Development Office and Employment Opportunities

Summer Research Assistant - Prof Yasmin Dawood

Professor Yasmin Dawood will be hiring a full-time summer research assistant to help with various projects on election law, democracy, and comparative constitutional law. The position will begin approximately mid-May and end mid-August although there is some flexibility around dates. The hourly pay is $20.00 for 35 hours/week.

The candidate should have strong research and writing skills. If you are interested in the position, please provide hard copies of (1) a cover note (2) CV and (3) copy of your law school transcript to Angie Agulto, Faculty Assistant, in Room J-486, 4th floor, Jackman Law Building by Wednesday, March 11th at 3 pm. Please provide your email address in the cover note.

Judicial Internships Across Canada

Judicial Internships Across Canada

The Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice (CIAJ) is pleased to announce the return of its Internships Across Canada Program, established in 2019. Open to students registered in an undergraduate law degree, the program offers the possibility to spend a week or more shadowing a judge or an administrative tribunal member.

Last year, students were welcomed at courts in Fredericton, Toronto and Calgary. This year’s program is very promising with internships already confirmed for Charlottetown, Montreal, Ottawa, Iqaluit and Quebec, and more to come.

Deadline: April 17, 2020

Details:https://ciaj-icaj.ca/en/featured-judicial-internships-across-canada-2020/

*  *  *

Stages en milieu judiciaire

C’est avec grand enthousiasme que l’Institut canadien d’administration de la justice (ICAJ) annonce le retour de son programme pancanadien de stages en milieu judiciaire, créé en 2019. Le programme s’adresse aux étudiantes et aux étudiants inscrits à un programme d’études menant à l’obtention d’un diplôme de premier cycle en droit et offre la possibilité d’effectuer un stage d’une semaine ou plus auprès d’un juge ou d’un membre de tribunal administratif.

L’an dernier, des stagiaires ont été accueillis à Fredericton, Toronto et Calgary. Le programme de cette année est très prometteur, avec des stages déjà confirmés à Charlottetown, Montréal, Ottawa, Iqaluit et Québec, et d’autres encore à venir.

Date limite : le 17 avril 2020

Détails : https://ciaj-icaj.ca/fr/vedette-stages-en-milieu-judiciaire-2020/

Bookstore

March Hours

Bookstore Hours in March

The Law Bookstore is open every weekday in March.

Mon-Thurs 11:30 am - 2:30 pm

Friday 3 pm - 7 pm

 

If you still need Winter Term texts, please get these soon.

Texts are being returned throughout March.

Reference Books

Looking for reference books to help you with studying or that paper you need to write? Come into the bookstore and check out our browsing/reference aisle.

Ask for The McGill Guide.

Ask if you don't find the reference book you need -- we can probably get it for you.

Still Need Textbooks?

Still need to get a textbook?

Got an open book exam?

Textbooks for the winter term are being returned to publishers throughout March. Stop by the bookstore as soon as possible to make sure you can get what you need.

 

Please NOTE: Any print-to-order coursepacks have a 24 hour turn around and will no longer be available to order once classes end.

External Announcements: Events

CrimSL Speaker Series Winter 2020 Schedule
Criminology Map and Directions

Unless otherwise specified, talks are held from 12:30 to 2 pm 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.

Wednesday Feb. 26
“Labour in hard times: labour activists in the European Court of Human Rights”
Filiz Kahraman, Assistant Professor, Political Science, U of T

Thursday Feb. 27
“The punitive turn in Latin America: Theoretical and comparative perspectives”
Maximo Sozzo, Professor, Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Argentina

Wednesday March 4
“Syndicate women: gender and networks in Chicago organized crime”
Chris Smith, Assistant Professor, Sociology, UTM

Thursday March 12
“Racial bias and judging: spotlight on the R.D.S. case, 1993-97”
Constance Backhouse, Professor of Law, University of Ottawa

Note: other talks and workshops for the Winter 2020 term are in the planning process

If you are a person with a disability and require accommodation, please contact Lori Wells at 416-946-5824 or email lori.wells@utoronto.ca and we will do our best to make appropriate arrangements

Tue, Mar 17: Igor Shoikhedbrod, Re-Politicizing the Future of Work in the Age of Automation and AI (Ethics of AI in Context)

Re-Politicizing the Future of Work in the Age of Automation and AI

The spectre of generalized automation and the unprecedented pace of developments in intelligent machine learning have brought into question the future of work and its normative value. The issues raised by ongoing debates about the future of work are undeniably interdisciplinary in scope—ranging from considerations in moral and political philosophy to economics, labour studies, and even futurism. With this interdisciplinary terrain in mind, the talk will take as its point of departure the ethical implications of automation and AI through a critical dialogue between normative political philosophy and political economy. I will begin by outlining the widespread empirical evidence suggesting that automation and AI will radically transform the ways that human beings conceive, perform, and grapple with work. Such empirical considerations, which include prognoses of mass unemployment, under-employment, as well as utopian and dystopian renditions of complete automation, necessitate a prior discussion about the normative value that is assigned to work and working. Indeed, even the most pragmatic policy questions about whether automation should be welcomed or discouraged are predicated upon the value or disvalue that commentators assign to work. I will argue that the meaning of work should be fundamentally rethought and contested in the age of automation and AI. Rather than calling for the abolition of work (i.e. post-work) and resigning to an abstractly-conceived universal basic income, priority should be given to reducing necessary labour-time through regulatory constraints that are wrested politically. Such a reduction in necessary labour-time should coincide with a diversification of the range of skills and activities that are performed by human beings in the age of automation and AI. However, these goals can only be achieved by revaluing and re-politicizing the future of work.

➡︎ please register here

Igor Shoikhedbrod
University of Toronto
Centre for Ethics

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

Torys' IP Networking Event

Interested in IP Law? We are pleased to invite you to an information session and a networking reception for students who want to learn more about the practice of IP law at Torys. 

Date: Thursday, March 26, 2020

Time: 5:00 - 6:00 p.m. Panel discussion; 6:00 - 7:00 p.m. Networking reception

To RSVP, please email to Elrica Saw at esaw@torys.com and indicate any dietary restrictions by March 12th.

Date of event:
Thu. Mar. 26, 2020, 5:00pm
Location:
79 Wellington St. W., 33rd Floor
Event conditions:
RSVP Required
Fri, Apr 3: Brian Cantwell Smith, The Promise of Artificial Intelligence: Reckoning and Judgment (Author Meets Critics)

The Promise of Artificial Intelligence: Reckoning and Judgment (MIT Press 2019)
Brian Cantwell Smith
Faculty of Information
University of Toronto

Commentators:
Parisa Moosavi (York University, Philosophy)
Regina Rini (York University, Philosophy)
Avery Slater (University of Toronto, English)
John Vervaeke (University of Toronto, Cognitive Science)

☛ please register here

In this provocative book, Brian Cantwell Smith argues that artificial intelligence is nowhere near developing systems that are genuinely intelligent. Second wave AI, machine learning, even visions of third-wave AI: none will lead to human-level intelligence and judgment, which have been honed over millennia. Recent advances in AI may be of epochal significance, but human intelligence is of a different order than even the most powerful calculative ability enabled by new computational capacities. Smith calls this AI ability “reckoning,” and argues that it does not lead to full human judgment—dispassionate, deliberative thought grounded in ethical commitment and responsible action. Taking judgment as the ultimate goal of intelligence, Smith examines the history of AI from its first-wave origins (“good old-fashioned AI,” or GOFAI) to such celebrated second-wave approaches as machine learning, paying particular attention to recent advances that have led to excitement, anxiety, and debate. He considers each AI technology’s underlying assumptions, the conceptions of intelligence targeted at each stage, and the successes achieved so far. Smith unpacks the notion of intelligence itself—what sort humans have, and what sort AI aims at.
Smith worries that, impressed by AI’s reckoning prowess, we will shift our expectations of human intelligence. What we should do, he argues, is learn to use AI for the reckoning tasks at which it excels while we strengthen our commitment to judgment, ethics, and the world.

03:00 PM - 05:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
Rm 200, Larkin Building

Wed, Mar 18: Teresa Heffernan, Fiction Writes Back: “Limitless Profit,” Artificial Intelligence, and the Immortality Industry (Ethics@Noon)

Fiction Writes Back: “Limitless Profit,” Artificial Intelligence, and the Immortality Industry

This talk begins with an investigation of the far reaches of the multi-billion-dollar immortality/AI industry and the money and power behind the scenes that fuels fantasy science as the planet teeters on the brink of collapse. It considers contemporary fictions that have, in turn, challenged the tech industry and its use of fiction to market this science, exposing its ideological underpinnings and its paradoxical escalation of the end of all life even as it hankers after immortality. While the tech industry is relentlessly focused on a future that is always “future” and never part of a past, I consider its archaeology by unearthing the future’s archaic longings: one of the oldest and longest surviving stories in the world, The Epic of Gilgamesh, is about a tyrannical king who wants immortality. In failing in his quest, however, Gilgamesh learns what it means to live as an ethical human being. Drawing on the lesson in this ancient epic, the talk concludes with a reflection on the connection between mortality, responsibility, and freedom. Exposing the branding of fiction as science by the AI/immortality industry, reclaiming the potential of fiction to cultivate an ethical imagination, and restoring the importance of death to life are important steps, this talk argues, in halting the catastrophic decline of the planet.

☛ please register here

Teresa Heffernan
St. Mary’s University
English

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

Fri, Mar 13: Race and Medicine: Philosophical and Historical Perspectives (A C4E Conference)

Race and Medicine: Philosophical and Historical Perspectives

Among the many axes of racial inequality, disparities in access to medicine remain particularly stark. This is especially visible in the United States, where the lack of publicly funded universal health care means that poor and working-class people – among whom, as everywhere, there are disproportionate numbers of non-white racial and ethnic minorities – who are at a particular disadvantage within American healthcare system(s). And, in the US, even controlling for class-based metrics, African Americans, in particular, are more likely to suffer from a panoply of health risks at significantly higher rates than their counterparts. This workshop brings together four scholars working on the intersections on race, medicine, and healthcare from both historical and philosophical perspectives, tracing the mutations of health inequality over time and reflecting on the philosophical implications for questions of racial justice.

Participants

Elena Comay del Junco is post-doctoral fellow at the Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto. Her work spans ancient philosophy and philosophy of race, with an emphasis on race and medicine.

Korey Garibaldi is Assistant Professor in the Department of American Studies at Notre Dame. Garibaldi studies the social and intellectual history of the United States, with a special interest in the history of late nineteenth and twentieth-century literary production. He also studies the cultural history of race and medicine in the 20th century.

Evelynn Hammonds is the Barbara Gutmann Rosenkrantz Professor of the History of Science and Professor of African and African American Studies at Harvard University. Professor Hammonds is the author of Childhood’s Deadly Scourge: The Campaign to Control Diphtheria in New York City , 1880–1930 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999). She co-edited with Barbara Laslett, Sally G. Kohlstedt, and Helen Longino Gender and Scientific Authority (University of Chicago Press, 1996). She has published articles on the history of disease, race and science, African American feminism, African American women and the epidemic of HIV/AIDS, and analyses of gender and race in science and medicine.

Yolonda Yvette Wilson is a 2019-2020 fellow at the National Humanities Center and a 2019-2020 Encore Public Voices fellow. Her research interests include bioethics, social and political philosophy, race theory, and feminist philosophy. She is broadly interested in the nature and limits of the state’s obligations to rectify historic and continuing injustice, particularly in the realm of health care, and is developing an account of justice that articulates specific requirements for racial justice in health care at the end of life.

Schedule

Morning: Philosophy
9h30-11: Yolonda Wilson, “Race, Health Justice, and the Policing of Black Bodies”
11h30-1: Elena Comay del Junco, “Racism as Neglect: Lessons for Philosophy from the History of Medicine”

Afternoon: History
2:30-4: Korey Garibaldi, “Toward a Literary History of Racial Medicine”
4:30-6: Evelynn Hammonds, TBA

09:30 AM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin

Rotman: “Driving Innovation in Organizations” — Discount for U of T students, staff and faculty

Rotman is hosting its 22nd Annual Lifelong Learning Conference on the theme of “Driving Innovation in Organizations” on May 29. We wanted to extend an invitation to all current U of T students, staff and faculty members to register at our lowest discount rate of $175 + HST.

The conference consists of 6 talks by authors who will focus on the above theme with networking breaks built into the morning and afternoon followed by a reception at the end of the day. All registrants will receive copies of the 6 featured books along with the Spring 2020 issue of Rotman Management Magazine. We typically receive upwards of 300 registrants so it’s a great chance to connect with fellow colleagues, students, alumni, and business professionals from across the GTA.

The event is also open to anyone outside of Rotman and UofT. However, their registration fee is determined by their relationship with the Rotman School. If you know someone who might be interested in attending please feel free to direct them to the event listing on our website: https://uoft.me/LLL2020

If you have any questions do not hesitate to contact me directly.

Daniel Ellul
Coordinator
Public Events

t. 416 978 6119

Room #4064
Rotman School of Management
105 St. George Street, Toronto, Canada M5S 3E6
www.rotman.utoronto.ca


Date of event:
Fri. May. 29, 2020, 11:45pm
Book Launch Nandita Sharma, Home Rule: National Sovereignty and the Separation of Natives and Migrants


What? Launch of Nandita Sharma's new book, Home Rule: National Sovereignty and the Separation of Natives and Migrants (Duke University Press, 2020), on Thursday March 26, 6 - 8pm.

Where? International Room, Ryerson University’s International Learning Centre, 240 Jarvis Street, Toronto, ON

Who? Discussants: Bridget Anderson, Radhika Mongia, Rinaldo Walcott and, Cynthia Wright, followed by comments by Nandita

Organized by Another Story Bookshop and the Graduate Program in Immigration and Settlement Studies at Ryerson University.

Co-Sponsors: Women and Gender Studies, University of Toronto Mississauga; York Centre for Asian Research, York University; Department of Sociology, York University 

Date of event:
Thu. Mar. 26, 2020, 11:45pm
Everyday Transgressions event featuring Professor Adelle Blacket

FRIDAY 20 MARCH 2020 1230-230

IKB 2027 OSGOODE HALL LAW SCHOOL

REGISTRATION REQUIRED: BIT.LY/BLACKETTMARCH20

A Discussion with

ADELLE BLACKETT

PROFESSOR OF LAW, CANADA RESEARCH CHAIR IN TRANSNATIONAL LABOUR LAW AND DEVELOPMENT FACULTY OF LAW, MCGILL UNIVERSITY

Author of EVERYDAY TRANSGRESSIONS Domestic Workers' Transnational Challenge to International Labor Law Cornell UP, 2019

With Commentary on the Book by:

Professors Amar Bhatia | Michele Johnson | Jennifer Nedelsky | Kerry Rittich | Adrian Smith | Ethel Tungohan |  Leah Vosko

This Institute for Feminist Legal Studies event graciously co sponsored by the Global Labour Research Centre at York

T H E A U T H O R

ADELLE BLACKETT

Professor of Law and Canada Research Chair in Transnational Labour Law and Development at the Faculty of Law, McGill University, where she teaches and researches in the areas of labour and employment law, trade regulation, law and development, critical race theory and slavery and the law. Professor Blackett holds a B.A. in History from Queen’s University, civil law and common law degrees from McGill, and an LL.M. and a doctorate in law from Columbia University. Professor Blackett is the recipient of prestigious research fellowships, notably the Social Science and Humanities Research Council’s Bora Laskin National Fellowship in

Human Rights Research in 2010, and the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Fellowship in 2016 on transnational futures of international labour law, for which she organized an eponymous course in winter 2019. She was a William Dawson Scholar at McGill from 2007 to 2016, and has been a visiting scholar at the African Development Bank, the Australian National University and SOAS (University of London). She founded and directs the Labour Law and Development Research Laboratory (LLDRL) at McGill, was a founding steering committee member of the international Labour Law Research Network (LLRN), and is member of the Quebec based Inter-University Research Centre on Globalization and Work (CRIMT).A former official of the International Labour Office in Geneva, Professor Blackett has been an ILO expert on international standard setting on decent work for domestic workers (2008-2011). In 2015, the Canadian Association of Black Lawyers awarded her its Pathfinder Award for her significant contributions to the legal community and the community at large. In November 2018, Professor Blackett was appointed to the Human Rights Expert Panel of the Government of Canada’s renewed Court Challenges Program. She was appointed to the Canada-European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) Chapter 23 (Trade and Labour) Roster of experts in December 2018. Professor Blackett was elected an associate member of the International Academy of Comparative Law in July 2019.

T H E B O O K

Everyday Transgressions: Domestic Workers' Transnational Challenge to International Labor Law (Cornell University Press 2019)

In this accessible and fascinating book, Prof. Blackett "[a]s the principal legal architect…takes us behind the scene to show us how Convention No. 189 transgresses the everyday law of the household workplace to embrace domestic worker’s human rights claim to be workers like any other – and like no other. ” Copies will be available for purchase at the event.

T H E C O M M E N T A T O R S

PROFESSORS AMAR BHATIA | MICHELE JOHNSON | JENNIFER NEDELSKY | KERRY RITTICH | ADRIAN SMITH | ETHEL TUNGOHAN & LEAH VOSKO WILL OFFER COMMENTS AND CONNECTIONS.

 

Lecture by Dr. Naveen Minai: The Desi Butch Archive: Refusals, Reworking, Reimagining

Visiting Sexuality Studies Scholar Annual Lecture: 

“The Desi Butch Archive: Refusals, Reworking, Reimagining.” 

Dr. Naveen Minai  

Date: Thursday, March 12, 2020

Time: 2:30 – 4:30 PM

Where: Harry Crowe Room (109 Atkinson Room)

New College, Keele Campus, York University 

RSVP: cfr@yorku.ca 

****  

Accessibility: Accessible space. Everyone welcome.

Directions to York University
York University campus map 

Facebook link: https://www.facebook.com/events/486015835425851/  

Dr. Minai’s project examines queer and trans South Asian and South Asian American and Canadian masculinities as sites and forms of intimacy, collectivity, genealogy, desire, and kinship that point to the ways in which space, sexuality, and gender are co-constitutive, especially transnational logics of land, home, diaspora. Her work on desi butch intervenes in this gap in debates about sexuality, nation, and land in South Asia by examining desi, butch, and desi butch as potential analytics, including the points, spaces, and forms in which settler colonial, postcolonial, and neocolonial forms of power intersect. 

Naveen Minai is a Visiting Scholar in Sexuality Studies at York University. She has a PhD in gender and sexuality studies from UCLA and her work focuses on queer and trans masculinities of colour, transnational sexuality studies, diaspora studies, global literary and visual cultures, and digital humanities. 

 

Co-Sponsored by Sexuality Studies and the Centre for Feminist Research 

 

 

Centre For Feminist Research 

Kaneff Tower
York University
Phone: 416-736-5915
cfr@yorku.ca

U of T Entrepreneurship Week

The University of Toronto’s annual celebration of all things entrepreneurship is coming on March 9-13, 2020.  Please join us for U of T Entrepreneurship Week

Throughout the week there will be several events in ONRamp – U of T’s co-working startup space – and across our tri-campus community. See the full calendar and register here.

The capstone event is the True Blue Expo on Thursday March 12, 2020 from 10am-5pm at MaRS. Registration is open to all: https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/true-blue-expo-2020-tickets-90900155813

Attendees will have the opportunity to:

  • Meet our 60+ U of T startups and learn about their innovations.
  • Learn about U of T’s entrepreneurship and incubator programs.
  • Network with investors, non-profit and government organizations that support startups.
  • Attend a keynote address by Michele Romanow from CBC's Dragon's Den (requires separate registration here).
  • Watch 10 startups compete for the RBC Prize for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, and celebrate with the winners at the RBC Awards Reception!
Toronto Lawyers Association Program: Protecting the Record: Advice for Trial Lawyers from the Appeal’s Perspective

Toronto Lawyers Association Program: Protecting the Record: Advice for Trial Lawyers from the Appeal’s Perspective

Are you new to trial work and would like to know what you can do to protect the record? Would you like some tips and tricks for success on what might be your first appeal? This Toronto Lawyers Association’s program is designed to give you an appeal’s perspective so that you can maximize the conduct of a trial and improve your client’s position in the event of on appeal.

The panel of appellate experts will share tips and advice on how counsel can improve their client’s position, as either appellant or respondent, by thinking ahead. Topics will include:

  • Ensuring you get it all into evidence
  • Making objections clearly on the record
  • Preparing for the appeal while you prepare for trial

Speakers:

  • Justice Bradley Miller, Court of Appeal for Ontario
  • Shantona Chaudhury, Pape and Chaudhury LLP
  • Cynthia Kuehl, Lerners LLP

Moderator:

  • Jennifer L. Hunter, Lerners LLP

Program details:

Monday, March 30, 2020

5:15 – 7:00 p.m. (Registration at 5:00 p.m.)

TLA Lawyers Lounge, 2nd Floor, 361 University Avenue Court House

More details and registration:

https://tlaonline.ca/event/education_program/advice-for-trial-lawyers

A limited number of complimentary tickets is available for Law School Students. Contact Sandra Porter at events@tlaonline.ca

Date of event:
Mon. Mar. 30, 2020, 11:45pm

External Announcements: Opportunities

Call for Volunteers: Do a Trial! 2020

Do A Trial! 2020

The Advocates’ Society is holding our annual Do a Trial! program on Saturday, April 4, 2020 and are looking for volunteers to act as court registrars and witnesses for the day (9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.). The program will take place at the Federal Court of Canada Courthouse at 180 Queen Street West, Toronto. There will be a post-program reception, where you will have the opportunity to network with senior litigators and meet the judges. This is a unique opportunity for junior counsel to observe and participate in the process of a real trial.

The role of Court Registrar includes:

  • Calling the court to order and identifying the presiding judge (script to be provided)
  • Swearing in of witnesses
  • Timing of each phase of the trial

The role of the Witness includes:

  • Preparing for and playing two characters during the trial

To assist with preparation, we provide volunteers with a materials package that includes a summary of the facts, pleadings, discovery transcripts, and witness statements for the witnesses, and scripts for the registrars. Please note that registrars are asked to be robed on the day of the program.

If you are interested in volunteering or would like more information, please contact Anya Baker, the Education Program Coordinator for The Advocates' Society at anya@advocates.ca

Human Rights Watch - International Summit Volunteer Opportunity!

Tawnshi,

I hope this message finds you well. As a member of the Canada Committee of Human Rights Watch (HRW), I am writing to tell you about an exciting volunteering opportunity we have coming up in Toronto.

Human Rights Watch is searching for enthusiastic volunteers to assist with the international Human Rights Watch Council Summit that is taking place in downtown Toronto from Sunday, June 7 until Wednesday, June 10, 2020.

The Council Summit is an annual, three-day long conference that provides an intensive learning experience for participants. Attendees get to know one another, meet Human Rights Watch’s expert staff, and hear from prominent figures in the human rights movement. Recent Council Summits have taken place in Berlin, Kyoto, Zurich and Los Angeles. This is the first time the Summit will be held in Toronto and human rights activists will be traveling from around the world to attend.

As a volunteer, you will be contributing to the mission of raising awareness and advancing education on human rights issues both in Canada and around the world. You will play a vital role in producing a large event for HRW’s supporters. As a fully independent non-governmental organization, HRW is supported by contributions from private individuals and foundations worldwide. They do not accept government funding. This makes your support and participation all the more valuable and important.

Volunteers will have the opportunity to learn from one of the world’s leading independent organizations dedicated to protecting the human rights of all people. A letter for volunteer hours can be provided upon request.

HRW is looking for volunteers who are passionate and enthusiastic with good interpersonal and oral communication skills. If this sounds like you, I encourage you to apply. I realize that the conference falls on dates you will likely be working but if you approach your summer employer in a good way, explain the uniqueness of the opportunity and the learning it will provide, they may allow you to take paid or unpaid leave for a day or two. If you want to chat with me about how to approach your employer, please ask!

If you have family or friends who have time to volunteer and are interested in human rights internationally, I encourage you to pass this email along to those folks.

The HRW volunteer posting is online here: https://boards.greenhouse.io/humanrightswatch/jobs/4649091002. If you have any questions or concerns, please email me and I will put you in touch with the folks in the know.

Thank you for considering this opportunity. I care deeply about HRW and find my volunteer work with the organization to be incredibly rewarding. I hope you will too!

Amanda

External Announcements: Calls for Papers

Smith-Doheny Legal Ethics Writing Competition – $2,500

Friday, April 24, 2020 - 5:00pm • N/A

Notre Dame Law School sponsors an annual writing competition on the topic of legal ethics. All students with an interest in legal ethics are invited and encouraged to participate. The competition is open to all law students at U.S. and Canadian law schools. Entries should concern any issue within the general category of legal ethics.

  • Entries must be original, unpublished work.
  • Entries must not exceed 50 pages, including notes, on 8.5 x 11 paper, double space, and standard font.
  • Coauthored essays may be submitted.
  • Submissions will be judged by a panel of faculty of the Notre Dame Law School.
  • A prize of $2,500 will be awarded for one winning entry.
  • All entries must be received before 5 p.m., Friday, April 24, 2020.
  • Please include cover letter with contact information and name of current law school.

All entries should be submitted to:

Smith-Doheny Legal Ethics Writing Competition

Notre Dame Law School

P.O. Box 780 Notre Dame, Indiana 46556

(574) 631-6749

Fax: (574) 631-8612

Email: sumption.1@nd.edu

Website: law.nd.edu/smith-doheny

Contact: Veronica Root Martinez

External Announcements: Other

U of T Planetary Health Campus & Planetary Health Alliance Survey

Three University of Toronto students have been named 2020 Planetary Health Campus Ambassadors (PHCA) by the Planetary Health Alliance. Please take a moment to fill out our short survey so we can better plan planetary health events for the U of T community in the coming year - https://forms.gle/B5RGX6sZc2gS1fZ38.  Feel free to get in touch with us atuoftpha@gmail.com

About the UofT PHCAs 2020: Yina Shan, a first year Master of Public Health student at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health; Meghan Kerr, a third year medical student; and Victoria Haldane, a second year PhD student in Health Services Research at IHPME will be working together to organize events and engage students, faculty, and staff across the three University of Toronto campuses on issues related to planetary health. Planetary health is an interdisciplinary field that aims to understand and address global environmental change and its health impacts.

U of T Law students place first at Walsh Family Law Moot

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

U of T law students Ryan Chan, Lauren Wildgoose, Hanna Yakymova and Rory Smith

U of T law students Ryan Chan, Lauren Wildgoose, Hanna Yakymova and Rory Smith

The Walsh Family Law Moot and Negotiation Competition is named to recognize the late Supreme Court of Canada Justice George Tucker Walsh and his contributions to the growth and development of family law.

U of T Law student wins top oralist at Laskin Moot

Monday, March 9, 2020

U of T law students Ryan Dorsman-Zehr, Katelyn Johnstone, Hannah Goddard-Rebstein and Lauren Scott

U of T law students Ryan Dorsman-Zehr, Katelyn Johnstone, Hannah Goddard-Rebstein and Lauren Scott

U of T Law students win Fox Intellectual Property Moot

Monday, March 9, 2020

Paul Jeronimo, Amanda Wolczanski, Sara Bolourchian, Aya Schechner (student coach) and Samantha Hargreaves.

U of T Law students Paul Jeronimo, Amanda Wolczanski, Sara Bolourchian, Aya Schechner (student coach) and Samantha Hargreaves.

Headnotes - Mar 9 2020

Announcements

Deans' Offices

Faculty Council, Wednesday, March 11, 2020 - Solarium

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, Wed. Mar. 11

Please join Dean Ed Iacobucci at “Yak’s Snacks”

Location: Jackman Law Atrium

Time:  10 – 11 a.m.

Please BRING YOUR OWN MUG

Future of Law: Artificial Intelligence and the Law - Real Benefits and Challenges

Future of Law:  Artificial Intelligence and the Law-- Real Benefits and Challenges
Wednesday March 18, 12:30-2pm
Location J125
Presenter: Prof. Maura Grossman

This workshop will cover how machine learning and deep learning work, provide an overview of legal AI products currently on the market, and explore some of the benefits and challenges lawyers can expect to face as AI applications continue to proliferate.

By attending this workshop you will:

  • Learn what artificial intelligence is and what it can do
  • Understand some of the ethical and other issues raised by algorithms, including:  bias; threats to privacy and security; transparency and explainibility; accountability and liability issues;
  • Explore the employment implications anticipated as a result of the fourth industrial revolution.

Register https://www.law.utoronto.ca/academic-programs/jd-program/workshops-and-registration

Date of event:
Wed. Mar. 18, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
J125
Event conditions:
Registration required
Academic Success Program (Winter 2020)
The Academic Success Program matches 1L students who would like academic assistance in their classes with an upper year student who has demonstrated academic excellence in the first year curriculum. This is a free and confidential service. Students may access the program as individuals or in small study groups. Please note there is a maximum of three appointments per student per semester. If you have made three appointments last semester, you are welcome to sign up for three more this semester. You can sign up at any time throughout the semester to request some assistance in any class.
To request an appointment, please fill out this form: https://forms.gle/qeJigKkweaV8nb5z6 (This is an updated link from last semester)
 
Please direct any questions to academic.support@utoronto.ca
Lawyers Doing Cool Things - Josh Stark, J.D. 2013

Career profile: Josh is a co-founder of ETHGlobal and L4, two companies that he continues to operate which provide services to the Ethereum cryptocurrency industry. He also works for the Ethereum Foundation, where he manages several special projects ranging from operations, growth, investor relations, and communications. Prior to his work in the Ethereum ecosystem, Josh articled at a Toronto corporate firm, and graduated from the Faculty in 2013.

To register, click here.

Date of event:
Mon. Mar. 23, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
Flv. 219
Event conditions:
Registration required

Student Office

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 12th – 13th and March 16th – 20th.

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 password to login with

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

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

LSAT Instructor summer position(s) at UofT Law

PAID SUMMER JOB

The Faculty of Law is looking to hire one person full-time or two persons part-time, who are dynamic, engaging presenters with a proven ability to motivate others to run its law school preparatory program for low-income students. As the LSAT Instructor you will be responsible for providing exceptional instruction to large classes of 25 participants each, and demonstrating subject matter expertise on all things related to the LSAT.

ELIGIBILITY

You must have an official LSAT score at or above the 90th percentile. A strong preference will be given to candidates with experience as an LSAT instructor or tutor.

MAIN DUTIES

The instructor will be responsible for updating the current, and developing new, LSAT course materials, and for delivering the course in its entirety at the law school and at a law firm in downtown Toronto from May 1st to August 28th (16 weeks).

The class times will be arranged with the instructor, who should plan for providing instruction at weekday evening classes and/or weekday daytime classes from May 4th to August 20th.

The instructor will also need to be available for additional mentoring, classroom prep time, mock testing time on one weekend day, and responding to student emails (which can be done flexibly in order to accommodate other commitments).

The pay is tentatively at $16/hr, plus 4% vacation pay.

HOW TO APPLY & APPLICATION DEADLINE

Email: 

  1. A statement of interest, specifying any LSAT tutoring/teaching experience
  2. Your LSAT candidate report showing your score
  3. A resume

to the JD Admissions Office at admissions.law@utoronto.ca
by end of day Thursday, March 19th.

Academic Events

Economic Torts welcomes Justice Thomas Cromwell
Wednesday, March 25, 2020 - 6:10pm to 8:00pm
Location: In J140

All members of the Faculty of Law community are cordially invited to attend a special sitting of the Economic Torts seminar, featuring guest speaker, the Honourable Thomas Cromwell.  Justice Cromwell served as a member of the Supreme Court of Canada from December 2008 to September 2016, after previously sitting as a Justice of the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal.  Prior to his appointment to the bench, Justice Cromwell practiced law in Kingston and Toronto and taught in the Faculty of Law of Dalhousie University.  Following his retirement from the Court, Justice Cromwell joined Borden Ladner Gervais LLP in Ottawa and Vancouver as Senior Counsel.

As a member of the Supreme Court of Canada, Justice Cromwell authored a number of leading decisions in the area of economic torts and commercial law, including: Bhasin v. Hrynew, 2014 SCC 71;  A.I. Enterprises Ltd. v. Bram Enterprises Ltd., 2014 SCC 12;  Tercon Contractors Ltd. v. British Columbia (Minister of Transportation & Highways), 2010 SCC 4; and Galambos v. Perez, 2009 SCC 48.

Adjunct Professors Alexander, Kain and Podolny will join Justice Cromwell in a discussion of the theory and development of the economic torts and commercial law jurisprudence in Canada.  Members of the audience will be invited to ask questions and participate in what promises to be a lively and stimulating conversation.

Legal Theory Workshop - Julie Saada

Legal Theory Workshop

Presents:

Julie Saada
Ecole de droit/Sciences Po Law School, Paris, France

Against just war theories?
Rousseau, the law of war, and political modernity.

Friday March 13, 2020
12:30pm -2:00pm
Falconer Hall, 84 Queen's Park
Room: Solarium(FA2)

Julie Saada (Agrégation, PhD and Habilitation, Ecole Normale Supérieure of Lyon, 2004, 2013) is Professor of Philosophy at Sciences Po Law School, Paris, France. She is an Alliance Visiting Professor (Spring 2020). Her research focuses on the history and ethics of war and postwar justice, as well as the history and philosophy of international law and Human Rights. Professor Saada’s areas of interest are also modern and contemporary political philosophy and critical legal theory.

For further workshop information contact events.law@utoronto.ca

 

Critical Analysis of Law Workshop: Sarah Seo

Critical Analysis of Law Workshop 

Presents:

 Sarah Seo
Iowa Law
 

Policing the Open Road: How Cars
Transformed American Freedom

 Tuesday March 10, 2020 
12:30pm - 2pm
Falconer Hall, 84 Queen's Park,
Solarium, FA2

Sarah Seo is a legal historian of criminal law and procedure in the twentieth-century United States. She is the author of Policing the Open Road: How Cars Transformed American Freedom (Harvard UP 2019), which examines the history of the automobile to explain the evolution of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence and to explore the problem of police discretion in a society committed to the rule of law. Seo has also published in the Yale Law JournalLaw and Social Inquiry, and Law and History Review, among others. Seo has received numerous awards, grants, and fellowships. She has received grants from the American Philosophical Society and the William Nelson Cromwell Foundation. In 2017, she was honored with the Professor Eric K. Yamamoto Emerging Scholar Award from the Conference of Asian Pacific American Law Faculty and the Dissertation Prize from Law & Society Association. Prior to joining Iowa Law School, Seo received the Samuel I. Golieb Fellowship at NYU Law School and the Charles W. McCurdy/Miller Center Fellowship at UVA Law School. Seo received her A.B. and Ph.D., both in history, at Princeton University. After earning her law degree at Columbia Law School, she clerked for Judge Denny Chin, then of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, and Judge Reena Raggi of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. She has also practiced at an international law firm and as a pro bono lawyer.

For further workshop details contact events.law@utoronto.ca

Ian Waddell, QC: The Drafting of Section 35 and the Berger Inquiry

The Law and Politics Club is excited to welcome Ian Waddell, QC to the law school. Ian is a former Member of Parliament and Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. He holds an LLM from the London School of Economics and and LLB from the University of Toronto. His complete CV, for those interested, can be found here: https://tinyurl.com/u3zoc9e

Ian was instrumental in the drafting of Section 35 of the Canadian Constitution, and will comment on its inception and development. He will also discuss his important role in as Counsel to the Berger Inquiry, and much much more. Let us know if you have any questions - we're excited to see you there!

We wish to acknowledge this land on which this session will take place. For thousands of years it has been the traditional land of the Huron-Wendat, the Seneca, and the Mississaugas of the Credit River. Today, this meeting place is still the home to many Indigenous people from across Turtle Island and we are grateful to have the opportunity to work on this land.

Seeman Health Law Seminar: Britta van Beers - Rewriting the human genome, rewriting human rights law?

Seeman Health Law Seminar

Presents:

Britta van Beers
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Rewriting the human genome, rewriting human rights law? Human rights, human dignity and human germline editing in the CRISPR era

Thursday March 12, 2020
12:30pm - 2:00pm
Falconer Hall
84 Queen's Park
Solarium (FA2)

In most legal orders, heritable genome editing is either prohibited or severely restricted. A recurring thought in these legal frameworks is that heritable genome editing would result in practices that are at odds with principles of human rights, such as dignity, justice and equality. However, now that CRISPR is bringing human germline editing within human reach, the question has risen as to whether these human rights bans still make sense. The call is growing louder to lift the ban on reproductive genome editing for therapeutic purposes as soon as the technology is safe for introduction in the clinic. This article critically examines these recent proposals from a human rights perspective. First, it examines the question as to how realistic the proposed distinction between therapeutic and non-therapeutic uses of human germline editing is in the CRISPR era. Second, it argues that these proposals rely on a one-dimensional understanding of the meaning of human rights for this issue. Finally, it suggests that this one-dimensional understanding paves the way for a regime of self-regulation by the scientific community that leaves little room for public debate on thequestion as to whether or how human germline editing fits in the long-term aspirations of society.

Britta van Beers is Professor of Law, Ethics and Biotechnology at the Department of Legal Theory of the Faculty of Law of the VU University, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. In her research and teaching she explores the legal-philosophical aspects of the regulation and governance of biomedical technologies. One of the main themes in her research concerns the legal and legal-philosophical meaning of concepts such as person, humanity and dignity. In recent work, she has focused on issues related to personalized medicine and human gene editing. Her publications include the co-edited volumes Personalised Medicine, Individual Choice and the Common Good; Symbolic Legislation and Developments in Biolaw; and Humanity across International Law and Biolaw.

For further details contact events.law@utoronto.ca

Seeman Health Law Seminar: Britta van Beers - From Medically Assisted to Algorithmically Assisted Reproduction

Presented as part of the JCB Bioethics Seminar Series and the Seeman Health Law Series:

Britta van Beers
Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam

From Medically Assisted to Algorithmically Assisted Reproduction

March 11, 2020
4:00pm - 5:30pm
Jackman Law Bulding, 78 Queen's Park
Room J130

 

R e g i s t e r  f o r  t h i s  l e c t u r e :


h t t p s : / / t i n y u r l . c o m / s q 6 6 b j u

Legal History Workshop

LEGAL HISTORY WORKSHOP

Shelley Gavigan, Osgoode Hall Law School

Improper Intimacies and Patriarchal Relations in Canada’s North-West Territories:

Methodological, Ethical, and Interpretative Challenges in the Nineteenth-Century Criminal Court Records. 

Wednesday March 11, 6.30, Betty Ho Classroom, Flavelle House

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

Health Law, Ethics & Policy Workshop Series: Britta van Beers

Health Law, Ethics & Policy Workshop Series

presents

Britta van Beers
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Advance Requests for Medical Aid in Dying and Dementia

Friday, March 13, 2020
10 AM - 1 PM
Room J125, Jackman Law Building
78 Queen's Park


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

 

Student Activities

SLS Presents Lunchtime Trivia!

We will be having lunchtime trivia every other Thursday in the Rowell Room, beginning on JANUARY 23RD. The trivia dates are as follows: January 23; January 30; February 13; February 27; March 12; March 26.

In order to be eligible for the cup, at least one team member must be in attendance at all events. However, non-competitive sporadic participation is also welcome and encouraged!

Firm Visit - Wright Henry
PLEASE SIGN UP FOR THIS FIRM VISIT HERE: https://forms.gle/LDUMfWZoh8xGPy8n8
 
We will be visiting Wright Henry to learn more about their worker- and union-side labour and employment law practice. You can learn more about the firm at https://https://wrighthenry.ca. If you have any questions for the firm, please send them at least a week ahead of the event via email to lels.utoronto@gmail.com. The address is 200 Wellington St. W., Suite 602.
Date of event:
Mon. Mar. 16, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
200 Wellington St. W., Suite 602
Event conditions:
Registration required
Firm Visit - Paliare Roland
Paliare Roland

Are you interested in litigation? Me too! Have you ever visited Paliare Roland? Me either! Let's go together!

On Thursday, March 19th @ 12:30pm the Labour and Employment Law Society will be attending a firm visit at Paliare. This is a visit for anyone interested in litigation as Paliare is NOT limited to labour and employment law. If you'd like to attend, please complete the linked Google form (if you have done so before, just fill it out again and choose ALL the firm visits you'd like to attend): https://forms.gle/jqWvyJQ3aFaymtuA8 We will send more details just before the visit. See you soon!

Date of event:
Thu. Mar. 19, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
155 Wellington St. West, 35th Floor
Event conditions:
Registration required
Social Purpose Real Estate Law Conference
This half-day conference will examine the legal, policy, and practical aspects of NPOs accessing and developing real estate with a focus on public lands while ensuring they serve public purposes in perpetuity. Drawing on experts from the public, private, and nonprofit sectors, this conference is ideal for nonprofit and government professionals trying to understand the barriers and current strategies to unlock the social purpose potential of real estate in Canada.
 
 
8:30 AM Doors Open-Light breakfast served
9:15 AM Social Purpose Real Estate 101
Featuring: Brian Iler, Iler Campbell & Ismail Ibrahim, Robins Appleby
10:30 AM Strategies for Overcoming Legal, Financial, and Practical Barriers
 Featuring: LoriAnn Gervain, ArtScape; Nancy Claridge, Carters Professional Corporation & Alfred Lee, VanCity
11:45 AM Public Lands in Public Hands-How to Ensure the Mission is Maintained
 Featuring: Claudia Pedrero, Parkdale Land Trust, George Brown, Integral North
 
This Conference is made possible by the generous support of: Iler Campbell and Carters Professional Corporation
Date of event:
Fri. Mar. 27, 2020, 8:30am
Location:
J250
Event conditions:
Registration required
Firm Visit - Ontario Nurses' Association
What's the best way to make an impact on firm recruiters? Meeting them! How can you do that? By visiting a firm!
 
Firm tours offer a special opportunity to visit a firm, meet associates and partners, and make an impression that'll be KEY come 1L, 2L and articling recruits. Plus, it gives you some amazing personal connections to play off of in your cover letter and help you stand out. Some firms are even participating in the upcoming 1L recruit - this is your best shot to get some face time with those who may eventually be hiring you!
 
The Labour and Employment Law Society will be visiting the Ontario Nurses' Association to learn more about their union law practice. You can learn more about ONA at https://www.ONA.org/. If you have any questions for the lawyers, please send them at least a week ahead of the event via email to lels.utoronto@gmail.com. The address is 85 Grenville St #400.
Date of event:
Wed. Mar. 25, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
85 Grenville St #400
Event conditions:
Registration required
Corporate Law and emerging industries: Lawyer panel focussing on esports and gaming, and blockchain, cryptocurrency and fintech

Corporate law and emerging industries: Lawyer panel focussing on esports and gaming, and blockchain, cryptocurrency and fintech

Co-hosted by Legal Hackers and Future of Law

Wednesday March 24, 12:30 – 2:00

Room J125

To register, click here

Sandwiches and water will be provided

Date of event:
Tue. Mar. 24, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
J125
Event conditions:
Registration required.
Animal Justice Student Association - Panel: Feminism and Animal Rights

Join the University of Toronto and Osgoode Hall Animal Justice Student Associations for a panel on the intersection of feminism and animal rights! Our panelists will each take 15 - 25 minutes to introduce themselves and their work followed by an interactive audience Q&A.

WHEN: 2:00PM - 4:00PM, March 20, 2020.
WHERE: Room P120, University of Toronto Faculty of Law, 78 Queens Park, Toronto, ON M5S 2C5.
REFRESHMENTS: Will be provided.

LAWYERS: Be aware that this program is eligible for up to 2 CPD Substantive Hours.

THE SPEAKERS
JESSICA EISEN is an Assistant Professor at the University of Alberta Faculty of Law. Professor Eisen obtained her JD from the University of Toronto and her LLM and SJD at Harvard Law School. Her research interests include animals and the law, constitutional and comparative constitutional law, equality and anti-discrimination law, feminist legal theory, intergenerational justice, and law and social movements.

ANDREA FREEMAN is an Associate Professor at the University of Hawaii's School of Law. Professor Freeman writes and researches at the intersection of critical race theory and food policy (food oppression), and critical race theory and consumer credit. She has presented her work at Yale Law School, Stanford Law School, Harvard Law School, Columbia Law School, and New York University, among other prestigious institutions.

ANGELA LEE is a PhD candidate at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law. Her doctoral work critically considers the intersections between new and emerging technologies; the environment; intergenerational, intragenerational, and interspecies justice; and the law, particularly in the context of food and agriculture. Her research has been published in the Dalhousie Law Journal, the University of Ottawa Law Review, the Canadian Journal of Women and the Law, and Canadian Food Studies.

Location:
Room P120
Firm Visit - AMAPCEO

PLEASE SIGN UP FOR THIS FIRM VISIT HERE: https://forms.gle/LDUMfWZoh8xGPy8n8

We will be visiting AMAPCEO to learn more about their union legal department. You can learn more about the firm at https://https://amapceo.on.ca/. If you have any questions for the firm, please send them at least a week ahead of the event via email to lels.utoronto@gmail.com. The address is 1 Dundas St W #2310.

Date of event:
Tue. Mar. 17, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
1 Dundas St W #2310
Event conditions:
Registration required
Technology & Intellectual Property Conference

Join us for a three-part panel series on March 11th, 18th, and 25th during lunch (12:30-2:00) in the Jackman Law Building. Professionals in the IP and Technology fields will gather to discuss the complex legal issues arising through the advent of Gene Editing and CRISPR Technologies, Pharmaceutical Pricing and Canadian Regulations, and the commercial impact of E-Commerce in Video and Online Gaming.

U of T Law Dodgeball tournament: March 12

On behalf of the Athletics’ Association and Out in Law

The Faculty of Law Athletic Association and Out in Law is hosting a 6 v 6 U of T Law Dodgeball tournament on Thursday March 12, 2020 from 8:00-10:00 pm at the Hart House gym. Sign up individually or with some friends (max. 6). There must be no more than 4 of every gender on one team! Get moving after all that reading you did over the break in a fun tournament where players of all skill levels are welcome. Snacks will be provided and each member of the winning team gets a prize!

Sign up here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSedY6cHSBCnUgR6JMU92PCPP_AXQu-XrnevXTtbsfpAVfDTcA/viewform

Out in Law Networking Event

University of Toronto Out in Law is excited to host a meet and mingle reception to launch our network! Our network's goals are to foster inclusion, community building, mentorship, and professional networking. We have partnered with Start Proud to bring you this networking event to meet fellow LGBTQ lawyers and law students, expand your network, foster mentorship within the community, and celebrate who we are!

Join us on March 17, 2020 at Flavelle House, 78 Queen's Park. Registration begins at 6:00 and the event starts at 6:30. Light food and non-alcoholic drinks will be provided. All LGBTQ lawyers and law students in Toronto (U of T and Osgoode) are welcome to attend. You must RSVP by March 13 at the following link to attend: https://forms.gle/MJVfuPmW2YYgpJtu8

Date of event:
Tue. Mar. 17, 2020, 6:00am
Location:
Rowell Room
Event conditions:
Registration required
BLS: M&A Panel

The Business Law Society is pleased to present the M&A Panel, which will be held on Tuesday, March 10 from 12:30-2:00 pm in P115. 

We are excited to have Kerri Lui (McCarthy), Benjamin Fenech (BLG), Shlomi Feiner (Blakes), and Spencer Burger (Stikeman) joining us as panelists.

Come learn about the exciting practice of M&A!

Date of event:
Tue. Mar. 10, 2020, 12:30pm
Location:
P115

Career Development Office and Employment Opportunities

Summer Research Assistant - Prof Yasmin Dawood

Professor Yasmin Dawood will be hiring a full-time summer research assistant to help with various projects on election law, democracy, and comparative constitutional law. The position will begin approximately mid-May and end mid-August although there is some flexibility around dates. The hourly pay is $20.00 for 35 hours/week.

The candidate should have strong research and writing skills. If you are interested in the position, please provide hard copies of (1) a cover note (2) CV and (3) copy of your law school transcript to Angie Agulto, Faculty Assistant, in Room J-486, 4th floor, Jackman Law Building by Wednesday, March 11th at 3 pm. Please provide your email address in the cover note.

Judicial Internships Across Canada

Judicial Internships Across Canada

The Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice (CIAJ) is pleased to announce the return of its Internships Across Canada Program, established in 2019. Open to students registered in an undergraduate law degree, the program offers the possibility to spend a week or more shadowing a judge or an administrative tribunal member.

Last year, students were welcomed at courts in Fredericton, Toronto and Calgary. This year’s program is very promising with internships already confirmed for Charlottetown, Montreal, Ottawa, Iqaluit and Quebec, and more to come.

Deadline: April 17, 2020

Details:https://ciaj-icaj.ca/en/featured-judicial-internships-across-canada-2020/

*  *  *

Stages en milieu judiciaire

C’est avec grand enthousiasme que l’Institut canadien d’administration de la justice (ICAJ) annonce le retour de son programme pancanadien de stages en milieu judiciaire, créé en 2019. Le programme s’adresse aux étudiantes et aux étudiants inscrits à un programme d’études menant à l’obtention d’un diplôme de premier cycle en droit et offre la possibilité d’effectuer un stage d’une semaine ou plus auprès d’un juge ou d’un membre de tribunal administratif.

L’an dernier, des stagiaires ont été accueillis à Fredericton, Toronto et Calgary. Le programme de cette année est très prometteur, avec des stages déjà confirmés à Charlottetown, Montréal, Ottawa, Iqaluit et Québec, et d’autres encore à venir.

Date limite : le 17 avril 2020

Détails : https://ciaj-icaj.ca/fr/vedette-stages-en-milieu-judiciaire-2020/

Journals, Research, and Scholarship

IIC Law Student Writing Awards - Now Open for 2020!

Submission Deadline: Friday June 15, 2020

The Insolvency Institute of Canada (IIC) sponsors an annual competition for full-time undergraduate students in Canadian Law Schools. The purpose of the IIC Law Student Writing Awards Program is to stimulate interest among law students in the research and development of papers based on corporate insolvency and restructuring topics and to recognize outstanding achievement in this endeavour.   

The awards program gives undergraduate students the opportunity to research insolvency issues, develop ideas, and bring proposals for reform to the attention of the business and legal community.

2020 IIC Law Student Writing Awards

First, second and third prizes of $7,500, $5,000 and $2,500 will be awarded. The prize for the first-place winner will be presented at the IIC's annual conference being held at the Grand Okanagan Resort in Kelowna, BC on October 15-18, 2020. Both the first place winner and their faculty sponsor will be invited guests of the IIC at the conference, with complimentary conference registration (including accommodations) and travel costs provided. If a co-authored paper is selected for first place, the division of the prize and the reimbursed travel costs will be entirely at the discretion of the winners.

Details of the program and the entry form are attached. Information is also available on the IIC website at http://www.insolvency.ca/en/whatwedo/lawstudentwritingawardsprogram.asp

The Insolvency Institute of Canada (IIC) is Canada's premiere private sector insolvency organization. A non-profit organization, the IIC is dedicated to improving the insolvency process and enhancing the professional quality of, and public respect for, the insolvency and bankruptcy practice in Canada.

Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History

OSGOODE SOCIETY FOR CANADIAN LEGAL HISTORY

Students interested in Canada’s legal past should consider joining the Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History, this country’s leading organization for promoting our legal history. The Osgoode Society is not affiliated to any law school, but its members include law students as well as history students, lawyers, judges, academics in law and history, and other interested parties. The President of the Osgoode Society is Mr Justice Robert Sharpe of the Ontario Court of Appeal, and the editor-in-chief is Professor Jim Phillips of the University of Toronto.

The Osgoode Society runs a number of programmes, principally its publishing programme which has produced 110 books since 1981. These books cover all areas of law – judicial biographies, court histories, criminal law, human rights law, women and the law, indigenous peoples and the law, case studies and more. Two years ago we also published the first volume of the first Hstory of Law in Canada. For a full listing of all these books and our other activities visit www.osgoodesociety.ca.  

Membership comes with a copy of the annual members book, which in 2020 is an account of the law of an Indigenous nation, the Anishnaabe, by Professor Heidi Bohaker of the University of Toronto History Department. Student membership, which includes this book, is only $25!!! You can join on line using our website.

Bookstore

March Hours

Bookstore Hours in March

The Law Bookstore is open every weekday in March.

Mon-Thurs 11:30 am - 2:30 pm

Friday 3 pm - 7 pm

 

If you still need Winter Term texts, please get these soon.

Texts are being returned throughout March.

Reference Books

Looking for reference books to help you with studying or that paper you need to write? Come into the bookstore and check out our browsing/reference aisle.

Ask for The McGill Guide.

Ask if you don't find the reference book you need -- we can probably get it for you.

Still Need Textbooks?

Still need to get a textbook?

Got an open book exam?

Textbooks for the winter term are being returned to publishers throughout March. Stop by the bookstore as soon as possible to make sure you can get what you need.

 

Please NOTE: Any print-to-order coursepacks have a 24 hour turn around and will no longer be available to order once classes end.

External Announcements: Events

CrimSL Speaker Series Winter 2020 Schedule
Criminology Map and Directions

Unless otherwise specified, talks are held from 12:30 to 2 pm 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.

Wednesday Feb. 26
“Labour in hard times: labour activists in the European Court of Human Rights”
Filiz Kahraman, Assistant Professor, Political Science, U of T

Thursday Feb. 27
“The punitive turn in Latin America: Theoretical and comparative perspectives”
Maximo Sozzo, Professor, Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Argentina

Wednesday March 4
“Syndicate women: gender and networks in Chicago organized crime”
Chris Smith, Assistant Professor, Sociology, UTM

Thursday March 12
“Racial bias and judging: spotlight on the R.D.S. case, 1993-97”
Constance Backhouse, Professor of Law, University of Ottawa

Note: other talks and workshops for the Winter 2020 term are in the planning process

If you are a person with a disability and require accommodation, please contact Lori Wells at 416-946-5824 or email lori.wells@utoronto.ca and we will do our best to make appropriate arrangements

Wed, Mar 11: Matthew Mahmoudi, Urban Technologies and Refugee Integration: Reinforcing Marginality? (Ethics of AI Emerging Scholars)

Urban Technologies and Refugee Integration: Reinforcing Marginality?

As emergent digital integration strategies are increasingly shaping urban refuge in cities such as Berlin and New York, it is important to interrogate whether they exclude, adversely include, or empower vulnerable migrant populations. The concept of the “smart city” is no longer sufficient to describe the ways these technologies invariably sort and control migrant bodies. Rather, the implications of this transition of technology actors into an emergent mobility-tech industry is better understood through an acknowledgement of a “digital periphery”– a digital enclosure in which the iconography of non-agentic others sustain value extraction from racialised bodies and places.

☛ please register here

Matt Mahmoudi
Cambridge
Development Studies

Matt Mahmoudi is a PhD candidate in Development Studies at the University of Cambridge, where he is also Program Lead at TheWhistle.org, an academic spin-out developing and researching digital human rights reporting suites. As Jo Cox Scholar, his research focuses on technological marginalisation in refugees and asylum seekers and examines the justice implications of new digital boundaries to life in cities in an era of “datafied refuge”. Matt co-coordinates the Cambridge branch of Amnesty International’s Digital Verification Corps, and co-founded and co-produces Declarations: The Human Rights Podcast at Cambridge’s Centre of Governance & Human Rights. Matt is  a coauthor on forthcoming OUP book ‘Digital Witness’.

04:00 PM - 05:30 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin

Tue, Mar 17: Igor Shoikhedbrod, Re-Politicizing the Future of Work in the Age of Automation and AI (Ethics of AI in Context)

Re-Politicizing the Future of Work in the Age of Automation and AI

The spectre of generalized automation and the unprecedented pace of developments in intelligent machine learning have brought into question the future of work and its normative value. The issues raised by ongoing debates about the future of work are undeniably interdisciplinary in scope—ranging from considerations in moral and political philosophy to economics, labour studies, and even futurism. With this interdisciplinary terrain in mind, the talk will take as its point of departure the ethical implications of automation and AI through a critical dialogue between normative political philosophy and political economy. I will begin by outlining the widespread empirical evidence suggesting that automation and AI will radically transform the ways that human beings conceive, perform, and grapple with work. Such empirical considerations, which include prognoses of mass unemployment, under-employment, as well as utopian and dystopian renditions of complete automation, necessitate a prior discussion about the normative value that is assigned to work and working. Indeed, even the most pragmatic policy questions about whether automation should be welcomed or discouraged are predicated upon the value or disvalue that commentators assign to work. I will argue that the meaning of work should be fundamentally rethought and contested in the age of automation and AI. Rather than calling for the abolition of work (i.e. post-work) and resigning to an abstractly-conceived universal basic income, priority should be given to reducing necessary labour-time through regulatory constraints that are wrested politically. Such a reduction in necessary labour-time should coincide with a diversification of the range of skills and activities that are performed by human beings in the age of automation and AI. However, these goals can only be achieved by revaluing and re-politicizing the future of work.

➡︎ please register here

Igor Shoikhedbrod
University of Toronto
Centre for Ethics

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

Torys' IP Networking Event

Interested in IP Law? We are pleased to invite you to an information session and a networking reception for students who want to learn more about the practice of IP law at Torys. 

Date: Thursday, March 26, 2020

Time: 5:00 - 6:00 p.m. Panel discussion; 6:00 - 7:00 p.m. Networking reception

To RSVP, please email to Elrica Saw at esaw@torys.com and indicate any dietary restrictions by March 12th.

Date of event:
Thu. Mar. 26, 2020, 5:00pm
Location:
79 Wellington St. W., 33rd Floor
Event conditions:
RSVP Required
Fri, Apr 3: Brian Cantwell Smith, The Promise of Artificial Intelligence: Reckoning and Judgment (Author Meets Critics)

The Promise of Artificial Intelligence: Reckoning and Judgment (MIT Press 2019)
Brian Cantwell Smith
Faculty of Information
University of Toronto

Commentators:
Parisa Moosavi (York University, Philosophy)
Regina Rini (York University, Philosophy)
Avery Slater (University of Toronto, English)
John Vervaeke (University of Toronto, Cognitive Science)

☛ please register here

In this provocative book, Brian Cantwell Smith argues that artificial intelligence is nowhere near developing systems that are genuinely intelligent. Second wave AI, machine learning, even visions of third-wave AI: none will lead to human-level intelligence and judgment, which have been honed over millennia. Recent advances in AI may be of epochal significance, but human intelligence is of a different order than even the most powerful calculative ability enabled by new computational capacities. Smith calls this AI ability “reckoning,” and argues that it does not lead to full human judgment—dispassionate, deliberative thought grounded in ethical commitment and responsible action. Taking judgment as the ultimate goal of intelligence, Smith examines the history of AI from its first-wave origins (“good old-fashioned AI,” or GOFAI) to such celebrated second-wave approaches as machine learning, paying particular attention to recent advances that have led to excitement, anxiety, and debate. He considers each AI technology’s underlying assumptions, the conceptions of intelligence targeted at each stage, and the successes achieved so far. Smith unpacks the notion of intelligence itself—what sort humans have, and what sort AI aims at.
Smith worries that, impressed by AI’s reckoning prowess, we will shift our expectations of human intelligence. What we should do, he argues, is learn to use AI for the reckoning tasks at which it excels while we strengthen our commitment to judgment, ethics, and the world.

03:00 PM - 05:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
Rm 200, Larkin Building

Wed, Mar 18: Teresa Heffernan, Fiction Writes Back: “Limitless Profit,” Artificial Intelligence, and the Immortality Industry (Ethics@Noon)

Fiction Writes Back: “Limitless Profit,” Artificial Intelligence, and the Immortality Industry

This talk begins with an investigation of the far reaches of the multi-billion-dollar immortality/AI industry and the money and power behind the scenes that fuels fantasy science as the planet teeters on the brink of collapse. It considers contemporary fictions that have, in turn, challenged the tech industry and its use of fiction to market this science, exposing its ideological underpinnings and its paradoxical escalation of the end of all life even as it hankers after immortality. While the tech industry is relentlessly focused on a future that is always “future” and never part of a past, I consider its archaeology by unearthing the future’s archaic longings: one of the oldest and longest surviving stories in the world, The Epic of Gilgamesh, is about a tyrannical king who wants immortality. In failing in his quest, however, Gilgamesh learns what it means to live as an ethical human being. Drawing on the lesson in this ancient epic, the talk concludes with a reflection on the connection between mortality, responsibility, and freedom. Exposing the branding of fiction as science by the AI/immortality industry, reclaiming the potential of fiction to cultivate an ethical imagination, and restoring the importance of death to life are important steps, this talk argues, in halting the catastrophic decline of the planet.

☛ please register here

Teresa Heffernan
St. Mary’s University
English

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

Fri, Mar 13: Race and Medicine: Philosophical and Historical Perspectives (A C4E Conference)

Race and Medicine: Philosophical and Historical Perspectives

Among the many axes of racial inequality, disparities in access to medicine remain particularly stark. This is especially visible in the United States, where the lack of publicly funded universal health care means that poor and working-class people – among whom, as everywhere, there are disproportionate numbers of non-white racial and ethnic minorities – who are at a particular disadvantage within American healthcare system(s). And, in the US, even controlling for class-based metrics, African Americans, in particular, are more likely to suffer from a panoply of health risks at significantly higher rates than their counterparts. This workshop brings together four scholars working on the intersections on race, medicine, and healthcare from both historical and philosophical perspectives, tracing the mutations of health inequality over time and reflecting on the philosophical implications for questions of racial justice.

Participants

Elena Comay del Junco is post-doctoral fellow at the Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto. Her work spans ancient philosophy and philosophy of race, with an emphasis on race and medicine.

Korey Garibaldi is Assistant Professor in the Department of American Studies at Notre Dame. Garibaldi studies the social and intellectual history of the United States, with a special interest in the history of late nineteenth and twentieth-century literary production. He also studies the cultural history of race and medicine in the 20th century.

Evelynn Hammonds is the Barbara Gutmann Rosenkrantz Professor of the History of Science and Professor of African and African American Studies at Harvard University. Professor Hammonds is the author of Childhood’s Deadly Scourge: The Campaign to Control Diphtheria in New York City , 1880–1930 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999). She co-edited with Barbara Laslett, Sally G. Kohlstedt, and Helen Longino Gender and Scientific Authority (University of Chicago Press, 1996). She has published articles on the history of disease, race and science, African American feminism, African American women and the epidemic of HIV/AIDS, and analyses of gender and race in science and medicine.

Yolonda Yvette Wilson is a 2019-2020 fellow at the National Humanities Center and a 2019-2020 Encore Public Voices fellow. Her research interests include bioethics, social and political philosophy, race theory, and feminist philosophy. She is broadly interested in the nature and limits of the state’s obligations to rectify historic and continuing injustice, particularly in the realm of health care, and is developing an account of justice that articulates specific requirements for racial justice in health care at the end of life.

Schedule

Morning: Philosophy
9h30-11: Yolonda Wilson, “Race, Health Justice, and the Policing of Black Bodies”
11h30-1: Elena Comay del Junco, “Racism as Neglect: Lessons for Philosophy from the History of Medicine”

Afternoon: History
2:30-4: Korey Garibaldi, “Toward a Literary History of Racial Medicine”
4:30-6: Evelynn Hammonds, TBA

09:30 AM - 06:00 PM
Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
200 Larkin

Rotman: “Driving Innovation in Organizations” — Discount for U of T students, staff and faculty

Rotman is hosting its 22nd Annual Lifelong Learning Conference on the theme of “Driving Innovation in Organizations” on May 29. We wanted to extend an invitation to all current U of T students, staff and faculty members to register at our lowest discount rate of $175 + HST.

The conference consists of 6 talks by authors who will focus on the above theme with networking breaks built into the morning and afternoon followed by a reception at the end of the day. All registrants will receive copies of the 6 featured books along with the Spring 2020 issue of Rotman Management Magazine. We typically receive upwards of 300 registrants so it’s a great chance to connect with fellow colleagues, students, alumni, and business professionals from across the GTA.

The event is also open to anyone outside of Rotman and UofT. However, their registration fee is determined by their relationship with the Rotman School. If you know someone who might be interested in attending please feel free to direct them to the event listing on our website: https://uoft.me/LLL2020

If you have any questions do not hesitate to contact me directly.

Daniel Ellul
Coordinator
Public Events

t. 416 978 6119

Room #4064
Rotman School of Management
105 St. George Street, Toronto, Canada M5S 3E6
www.rotman.utoronto.ca


Date of event:
Fri. May. 29, 2020, 11:45pm
Book Launch Nandita Sharma, Home Rule: National Sovereignty and the Separation of Natives and Migrants


What? Launch of Nandita Sharma's new book, Home Rule: National Sovereignty and the Separation of Natives and Migrants (Duke University Press, 2020), on Thursday March 26, 6 - 8pm.

Where? International Room, Ryerson University’s International Learning Centre, 240 Jarvis Street, Toronto, ON

Who? Discussants: Bridget Anderson, Radhika Mongia, Rinaldo Walcott and, Cynthia Wright, followed by comments by Nandita

Organized by Another Story Bookshop and the Graduate Program in Immigration and Settlement Studies at Ryerson University.

Co-Sponsors: Women and Gender Studies, University of Toronto Mississauga; York Centre for Asian Research, York University; Department of Sociology, York University 

Date of event:
Thu. Mar. 26, 2020, 11:45pm
York U Centre for Feminist Research: Anti-Blackness, Islam and Islamophobia

SAVE THE DATE! 

The Centre for Feminist Research is pleased to announce the next event in the

Spotlight on Islamophobia Event Series:

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Anti-Blackness, Islam and Islamophobia 

Date: Monday March 9, 2020
Time: 11:30 am -2:30 pm
Location: Founder’s College Room 305;  York University, 4700 Keele St

Link to event: https://www.facebook.com/events/186489802662766/ 

By exploring the complex histories and expressions of Islam in Africa and Muslims of African origin, this lecture and workshop considers the intersections between Islamophobia, race and anti-blackness. 

with panelists: 

Dr. Fatimah Jackson-Best, teaching in the Department of Anthropology; public health researcher specializes in mental health whose work focuses on communities in the Caribbean and Canada

Yusra Khogali, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Toronto Chapter, artist, community organizer and educator

Hannah Ali, Graduate Student, Graduate Program in Gender, Feminist and Women's Studies, York University

 Dr. Zulfikar Hirji, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, specializes in the social and cultural expressions of Muslims in historical and contemporary contexts. 

RSVP to: cfr@yorku.ca

 

Date of event:
Mon. Mar. 9, 2020, 11:45pm
Everyday Transgressions event featuring Professor Adelle Blacket

FRIDAY 20 MARCH 2020 1230-230

IKB 2027 OSGOODE HALL LAW SCHOOL

REGISTRATION REQUIRED: BIT.LY/BLACKETTMARCH20

A Discussion with

ADELLE BLACKETT

PROFESSOR OF LAW, CANADA RESEARCH CHAIR IN TRANSNATIONAL LABOUR LAW AND DEVELOPMENT FACULTY OF LAW, MCGILL UNIVERSITY

Author of EVERYDAY TRANSGRESSIONS Domestic Workers' Transnational Challenge to International Labor Law Cornell UP, 2019

With Commentary on the Book by:

Professors Amar Bhatia | Michele Johnson | Jennifer Nedelsky | Kerry Rittich | Adrian Smith | Ethel Tungohan |  Leah Vosko

This Institute for Feminist Legal Studies event graciously co sponsored by the Global Labour Research Centre at York

T H E A U T H O R

ADELLE BLACKETT

Professor of Law and Canada Research Chair in Transnational Labour Law and Development at the Faculty of Law, McGill University, where she teaches and researches in the areas of labour and employment law, trade regulation, law and development, critical race theory and slavery and the law. Professor Blackett holds a B.A. in History from Queen’s University, civil law and common law degrees from McGill, and an LL.M. and a doctorate in law from Columbia University. Professor Blackett is the recipient of prestigious research fellowships, notably the Social Science and Humanities Research Council’s Bora Laskin National Fellowship in

Human Rights Research in 2010, and the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Fellowship in 2016 on transnational futures of international labour law, for which she organized an eponymous course in winter 2019. She was a William Dawson Scholar at McGill from 2007 to 2016, and has been a visiting scholar at the African Development Bank, the Australian National University and SOAS (University of London). She founded and directs the Labour Law and Development Research Laboratory (LLDRL) at McGill, was a founding steering committee member of the international Labour Law Research Network (LLRN), and is member of the Quebec based Inter-University Research Centre on Globalization and Work (CRIMT).A former official of the International Labour Office in Geneva, Professor Blackett has been an ILO expert on international standard setting on decent work for domestic workers (2008-2011). In 2015, the Canadian Association of Black Lawyers awarded her its Pathfinder Award for her significant contributions to the legal community and the community at large. In November 2018, Professor Blackett was appointed to the Human Rights Expert Panel of the Government of Canada’s renewed Court Challenges Program. She was appointed to the Canada-European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) Chapter 23 (Trade and Labour) Roster of experts in December 2018. Professor Blackett was elected an associate member of the International Academy of Comparative Law in July 2019.

T H E B O O K

Everyday Transgressions: Domestic Workers' Transnational Challenge to International Labor Law (Cornell University Press 2019)

In this accessible and fascinating book, Prof. Blackett "[a]s the principal legal architect…takes us behind the scene to show us how Convention No. 189 transgresses the everyday law of the household workplace to embrace domestic worker’s human rights claim to be workers like any other – and like no other. ” Copies will be available for purchase at the event.

T H E C O M M E N T A T O R S

PROFESSORS AMAR BHATIA | MICHELE JOHNSON | JENNIFER NEDELSKY | KERRY RITTICH | ADRIAN SMITH | ETHEL TUNGOHAN & LEAH VOSKO WILL OFFER COMMENTS AND CONNECTIONS.

 

Lecture by Dr. Naveen Minai: The Desi Butch Archive: Refusals, Reworking, Reimagining

Visiting Sexuality Studies Scholar Annual Lecture: 

“The Desi Butch Archive: Refusals, Reworking, Reimagining.” 

Dr. Naveen Minai  

Date: Thursday, March 12, 2020

Time: 2:30 – 4:30 PM

Where: Harry Crowe Room (109 Atkinson Room)

New College, Keele Campus, York University 

RSVP: cfr@yorku.ca 

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Accessibility: Accessible space. Everyone welcome.

Directions to York University
York University campus map 

Facebook link: https://www.facebook.com/events/486015835425851/  

Dr. Minai’s project examines queer and trans South Asian and South Asian American and Canadian masculinities as sites and forms of intimacy, collectivity, genealogy, desire, and kinship that point to the ways in which space, sexuality, and gender are co-constitutive, especially transnational logics of land, home, diaspora. Her work on desi butch intervenes in this gap in debates about sexuality, nation, and land in South Asia by examining desi, butch, and desi butch as potential analytics, including the points, spaces, and forms in which settler colonial, postcolonial, and neocolonial forms of power intersect. 

Naveen Minai is a Visiting Scholar in Sexuality Studies at York University. She has a PhD in gender and sexuality studies from UCLA and her work focuses on queer and trans masculinities of colour, transnational sexuality studies, diaspora studies, global literary and visual cultures, and digital humanities. 

 

Co-Sponsored by Sexuality Studies and the Centre for Feminist Research 

 

 

Centre For Feminist Research 

Kaneff Tower
York University
Phone: 416-736-5915
cfr@yorku.ca

U of T Entrepreneurship Week

The University of Toronto’s annual celebration of all things entrepreneurship is coming on March 9-13, 2020.  Please join us for U of T Entrepreneurship Week

Throughout the week there will be several events in ONRamp – U of T’s co-working startup space – and across our tri-campus community. See the full calendar and register here.

The capstone event is the True Blue Expo on Thursday March 12, 2020 from 10am-5pm at MaRS. Registration is open to all: https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/true-blue-expo-2020-tickets-90900155813

Attendees will have the opportunity to:

  • Meet our 60+ U of T startups and learn about their innovations.
  • Learn about U of T’s entrepreneurship and incubator programs.
  • Network with investors, non-profit and government organizations that support startups.
  • Attend a keynote address by Michele Romanow from CBC's Dragon's Den (requires separate registration here).
  • Watch 10 startups compete for the RBC Prize for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, and celebrate with the winners at the RBC Awards Reception!
Toronto Lawyers Association Program: Protecting the Record: Advice for Trial Lawyers from the Appeal’s Perspective

Toronto Lawyers Association Program: Protecting the Record: Advice for Trial Lawyers from the Appeal’s Perspective

Are you new to trial work and would like to know what you can do to protect the record? Would you like some tips and tricks for success on what might be your first appeal? This Toronto Lawyers Association’s program is designed to give you an appeal’s perspective so that you can maximize the conduct of a trial and improve your client’s position in the event of on appeal.

The panel of appellate experts will share tips and advice on how counsel can improve their client’s position, as either appellant or respondent, by thinking ahead. Topics will include:

  • Ensuring you get it all into evidence
  • Making objections clearly on the record
  • Preparing for the appeal while you prepare for trial

Speakers:

  • Justice Bradley Miller, Court of Appeal for Ontario
  • Shantona Chaudhury, Pape and Chaudhury LLP
  • Cynthia Kuehl, Lerners LLP

Moderator:

  • Jennifer L. Hunter, Lerners LLP

Program details:

Monday, March 30, 2020

5:15 – 7:00 p.m. (Registration at 5:00 p.m.)

TLA Lawyers Lounge, 2nd Floor, 361 University Avenue Court House

More details and registration:

https://tlaonline.ca/event/education_program/advice-for-trial-lawyers

A limited number of complimentary tickets is available for Law School Students. Contact Sandra Porter at events@tlaonline.ca

Date of event:
Mon. Mar. 30, 2020, 11:45pm

External Announcements: Opportunities

Call for Volunteers: Do a Trial! 2020

Do A Trial! 2020

The Advocates’ Society is holding our annual Do a Trial! program on Saturday, April 4, 2020 and are looking for volunteers to act as court registrars and witnesses for the day (9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.). The program will take place at the Federal Court of Canada Courthouse at 180 Queen Street West, Toronto. There will be a post-program reception, where you will have the opportunity to network with senior litigators and meet the judges. This is a unique opportunity for junior counsel to observe and participate in the process of a real trial.

The role of Court Registrar includes:

  • Calling the court to order and identifying the presiding judge (script to be provided)
  • Swearing in of witnesses
  • Timing of each phase of the trial

The role of the Witness includes:

  • Preparing for and playing two characters during the trial

To assist with preparation, we provide volunteers with a materials package that includes a summary of the facts, pleadings, discovery transcripts, and witness statements for the witnesses, and scripts for the registrars. Please note that registrars are asked to be robed on the day of the program.

If you are interested in volunteering or would like more information, please contact Anya Baker, the Education Program Coordinator for The Advocates' Society at anya@advocates.ca

Human Rights Watch - International Summit Volunteer Opportunity!

Tawnshi,

I hope this message finds you well. As a member of the Canada Committee of Human Rights Watch (HRW), I am writing to tell you about an exciting volunteering opportunity we have coming up in Toronto.

Human Rights Watch is searching for enthusiastic volunteers to assist with the international Human Rights Watch Council Summit that is taking place in downtown Toronto from Sunday, June 7 until Wednesday, June 10, 2020.

The Council Summit is an annual, three-day long conference that provides an intensive learning experience for participants. Attendees get to know one another, meet Human Rights Watch’s expert staff, and hear from prominent figures in the human rights movement. Recent Council Summits have taken place in Berlin, Kyoto, Zurich and Los Angeles. This is the first time the Summit will be held in Toronto and human rights activists will be traveling from around the world to attend.

As a volunteer, you will be contributing to the mission of raising awareness and advancing education on human rights issues both in Canada and around the world. You will play a vital role in producing a large event for HRW’s supporters. As a fully independent non-governmental organization, HRW is supported by contributions from private individuals and foundations worldwide. They do not accept government funding. This makes your support and participation all the more valuable and important.

Volunteers will have the opportunity to learn from one of the world’s leading independent organizations dedicated to protecting the human rights of all people. A letter for volunteer hours can be provided upon request.

HRW is looking for volunteers who are passionate and enthusiastic with good interpersonal and oral communication skills. If this sounds like you, I encourage you to apply. I realize that the conference falls on dates you will likely be working but if you approach your summer employer in a good way, explain the uniqueness of the opportunity and the learning it will provide, they may allow you to take paid or unpaid leave for a day or two. If you want to chat with me about how to approach your employer, please ask!

If you have family or friends who have time to volunteer and are interested in human rights internationally, I encourage you to pass this email along to those folks.

The HRW volunteer posting is online here: https://boards.greenhouse.io/humanrightswatch/jobs/4649091002. If you have any questions or concerns, please email me and I will put you in touch with the folks in the know.

Thank you for considering this opportunity. I care deeply about HRW and find my volunteer work with the organization to be incredibly rewarding. I hope you will too!

Amanda

External Announcements: Calls for Papers

Smith-Doheny Legal Ethics Writing Competition – $2,500

Friday, April 24, 2020 - 5:00pm • N/A

Notre Dame Law School sponsors an annual writing competition on the topic of legal ethics. All students with an interest in legal ethics are invited and encouraged to participate. The competition is open to all law students at U.S. and Canadian law schools. Entries should concern any issue within the general category of legal ethics.

  • Entries must be original, unpublished work.
  • Entries must not exceed 50 pages, including notes, on 8.5 x 11 paper, double space, and standard font.
  • Coauthored essays may be submitted.
  • Submissions will be judged by a panel of faculty of the Notre Dame Law School.
  • A prize of $2,500 will be awarded for one winning entry.
  • All entries must be received before 5 p.m., Friday, April 24, 2020.
  • Please include cover letter with contact information and name of current law school.

All entries should be submitted to:

Smith-Doheny Legal Ethics Writing Competition

Notre Dame Law School

P.O. Box 780 Notre Dame, Indiana 46556

(574) 631-6749

Fax: (574) 631-8612

Email: sumption.1@nd.edu

Website: law.nd.edu/smith-doheny

Contact: Veronica Root Martinez

External Announcements: Other

U of T Planetary Health Campus & Planetary Health Alliance Survey

Three University of Toronto students have been named 2020 Planetary Health Campus Ambassadors (PHCA) by the Planetary Health Alliance. Please take a moment to fill out our short survey so we can better plan planetary health events for the U of T community in the coming year - https://forms.gle/B5RGX6sZc2gS1fZ38.  Feel free to get in touch with us atuoftpha@gmail.com

About the UofT PHCAs 2020: Yina Shan, a first year Master of Public Health student at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health; Meghan Kerr, a third year medical student; and Victoria Haldane, a second year PhD student in Health Services Research at IHPME will be working together to organize events and engage students, faculty, and staff across the three University of Toronto campuses on issues related to planetary health. Planetary health is an interdisciplinary field that aims to understand and address global environmental change and its health impacts.

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