Black History Month: U of T's Gloria Carpenter was a pioneer who helped bring legal change to the Caribbean

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Torontoenis U of T Yearbook, 1943

Gloria Carpenter, who studied at U of T before going on to become the first Black woman to graduate from Cambridge, stands in the back row, on the left, in this photo in the 1943 edition of Torontonensis (photo courtesy of University of Toronto Archives)

Alumna Melissa Kennedy honoured by civic group

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Melissa Kennedy

University of Toronto Faculty of Law alumna Melissa Kennedy (LLB 1987) has received the leading global honour for general counsel and law departments from the Directors Roundtable. 

U of T Law team wins the Wilson Moot

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Wilson Moot team

U of T law students Ahmed Elahi, Geri Angelova, Zoë Sebastien and Karen Chen with Supreme Court of Canada Justice Malcolm Rowe (centre)

University of Toronto law students took first place in the Wilson Moot – a competition created honour the outstanding contributions to Canadian law made by the late Honourable Bertha Wilson. 

U of T Law sweeps the Julius Alexander Isaac Moot

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

U of T law students Daniel Yang, Elizabeth Chan, Angela Hou (student coach), Kristen Kephalas, and Liam Thompson (photo courtesy Faculty of Law)

U of T law students Daniel Yang, Elizabeth Chan, Angela Hou (student coach), Kristen Kephalas, and Liam Thompson (photo courtesy Faculty of Law)

Professor Brenda Cossman writes about the Weinstein verdict’s impact on the #MeToo movement: Globe and Mail

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Should we celebrate the Weinstein verdict? It’s complicated writes U of T Law Professor Brenda Cossman, director of the Bonham Centre for Sexual Diversity Studies at U of T. 

In an op-ed for the Globe and Mail, Cossman writes: 

"In a New York court, Judge James Burke cautioned the jury not to see the case as a referendum on #MeToo. He is absolutely right; the criminal trial was about the exacting standards of proof that had to be established by the prosecution to find the former Hollywood mogul criminally responsible.

Give the Wet’suwet’en space to conduct their law-making, away from barricades: Professor Douglas Sanderson, Policy Options

Monday, February 24, 2020

The Wet’suwet’en have resolved land issues for millennia with their own legal system. An all-clans Feast could help resolve the current dispute.

Professor Douglas Sanderson, a member of the Opaskwayak Cree Nation, writes for Policy Options:

Professor Audrey Macklin receives the President’s Impact Award and the Carolyn Tuohy Impact on Public Policy Award

Saturday, February 22, 2020

 

Professor Audrey Macklin

For the profound impact she has made on migration and citizenship law, business and human rights, Professor Audrey Macklin has received the President’s Impact Award.

What is buzzer practice with 'a $9 toilet paper-holder?' U of T's Brooke MacKenzie shares her Jeopardy! secrets

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Jeopardy! host Alex Trebek with Brooke MacKenzie, a doctoral candidate in U of T's Faculty of Law and a recent Jeopardy! champion (photo courtesy of Brooke MacKenzie)

Jeopardy! host Alex Trebek with Brooke MacKenzie, a doctoral candidate in U of T's Faculty of Law and a recent Jeopardy! champion (photo courtesy of Brooke MacKenzie)

Expert Advisory Group Releases Report on Assisted Dying and Mental Disorders

Friday, February 14, 2020

Following comprehensive review of the available evidence, the Expert Advisory Group (EAG) on Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) released a report February 13 cautioning that evolving assisted dying policies must not put the lives of Canadians who live with mental illness at risk. MAiD in Canada is for medical conditions with irreversible decline, yet unlike other medical conditions mental illnesses can never be predicted to be irremediable.