Town Hall + Book Launch Nov. 21 for Middle Income Access to Justice

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Moderated by Ellen Roseman,Toronto Star

(Toronto) The Faculty of Law is pleased to celebrate the book launch of Middle Income Access to Justice (Michael Trebilcock, Anthony Duggan and Lorne Sossin, eds.) with a Town Hall on November 21, 2012, moderated by consumer advocate, reporter and blogger Ellen Roseman, of the Toronto Star.

Watch the LSUC live webcast on articling debate Nov. 22, at 9 AM

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

The Faculty of Law will show the live webcast of the Law Society of Upper Canada’s future of articling debate--and decision-- on November 22, 2012, starting at 9:00 am in in the foyer of Flavelle House.

The decision resulting from the debate will have significant impact on the legal profession, law schools and students.

Unique degree, impressive first class: GPLLM graduates convocate today

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

By Lucianna Ciccocioppo

Convocation Day is always exciting, but particularly so for graduates of an inaugural class of an innovative new degree program, such as the Global Professional LLM at the Faculty of Law. There’s an extra-special feeling of “We made it,” coupled with “And we were the first!”

A unique, executive-style LLM in international business law, the GPLLM launched last year in September. And on November 13, 2012, 25 graduates will be picking up their hard-earned degrees and celebrating. But they are already proudly adding GPLLM to their credentials.

Prof. Jacob Ziegel - "There are better ways to investigate judicial conduct"

Thursday, November 8, 2012

In a commentary in The Lawyers Weekly, Prof. Jacob Ziegel argues that the Canadian Judicial Council’s inquiry procedures are unacceptably cumbersome ("There are better ways to investigate judicial conduct," Nov. 2, 2012). The full commentary is republished below.


There are better ways to investigate judicial conduct

Jacob Ziegel

Semester abroad: A letter from Beijing

Monday, November 5, 2012

For the first time, a Faculty of Law student is on exchange at Tsinghua University School of Law. Jonathan Chow writes how he's learning about much more than Chinese law.

By Jonathan Chow, 3L, Faculty of Law

I've been asked to write a short blurb about my time at Tsinghua University. I’ve been procrastinating—badly. The tricky thing, I think, is knowing what to write.

  Jonathan Chow at Beijing Wall

Check out summer intern experiences in the IHRP's latest edition of "Rights Review"

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Rights ReviewThe International Human Rights Program has published the latest issue of its magazine Rights Review. This issue follows the experiences of IHRP summer interns in countries across the globe.  Throughout these internships, IHRP interns engaged in diverse human rights issues ranging from rights to health to international justice mechanisms.

Prof. Anver Emon co-editor of new book, "Islamic Law and International Human Rights Law"

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Islamic Law and International Human Rights LawProf. Anver Emon is the co-editor, with Mark Ellis and Benjamin Glahn, of a new collection of essays published by Oxford University Press, Islamic Law and International Human Rights Law (2012).

Reconnecting at Reunion 2012

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

In the Age of Social Media, are reunions still necessary? Read--and listen to our audio file--for alumni comments

By Lucianna Ciccocioppo

On a spectacular fall evening in downtown Toronto, an energy was reverberating from the Faculty of Law on October 19, where more than 300 alumni gathered to catch up with classmates for Reunion 2012. Celebrating years ending in ‘2’ and ‘7’, a stand-up reception kicked off the class year dinners on October 19-20, 2012, which were spread across the city’s fine dining venues.

Faculty of Law will show LSUC live webcast on articling debate Oct. 25th

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

The Faculty of Law will show the live webcast of the Law Society of Upper Canada’s future of articling debate on October 25, 2012, starting at 9:30 am in in the foyer of Flavelle House.

The decision resulting from the debate will have significant impact on the legal profession, law schools and students.