Doctoral graduate Ido Katri awarded Governor General's Gold Medal for academic excellence

Monday, May 31, 2021

Former U of T graduate students Ido Katri (Faculty of Law)Kieran Quinn (Institute of Health Policy, Management, and Evaluation), and Mingyang Wei (Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering) have been awarded the prestigious Governor General’s Gold Medal for academic excellence. The medal, awarded each year to three students determined to have the highest academic standing, is one of the highest honours reserved for graduate students in Canada.

Meet Elder Constance Simmonds: Elder-in-Residence at U of T Law

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Elder Constance Simmonds

Elder Constance Simmonds is the Elder-in-Residence at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law, pictured during a drum making workshop at the Faculty in 2018 (photo Katie Tissington-Turner)

This year the University of Toronto Faculty of Law welcomed Elder Constance Simmonds as Elder-in-Residence.

Dispelling Common Assumptions about Employees’ Legal Right to Sick Pay: Professor Brian Langille and JD student Saambavi Mano, 3L

Monday, May 17, 2021

In an article published May 17 for the Canadian Law of Work Forum, Professor Brian Langille and JD student Saambavi Mano, 3L, review earlier Supreme Court of Canada decisions regarding employees’ legal right to sick pay. They say these decisions dispel common sick pay assumptions. They write: 

Professor Christopher Essert argues it's possible to reimagine property as an egalitarian institution: CBC Radio's Ideas

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

University of Toronto Professor Rinaldo Walcott is the director of U of T's Women and Gender Studies Institute and an associate professor at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE). His research is in the area of Black Diaspora Cultural Studies, gender and sexuality.

Walcott examines the relationship between policing and property in his book, On Property. He argues the history of being bought and sold shapes Black people's relationship to the idea of property. 

Law Alumni Association (LAA) welcomes new Council and Executive members

Monday, May 10, 2021

LAA

The Law Alumni Association (LAA) was established to promote the interests of the more than 10,000 graduates of the Faculty of Law, and to encourage the support and engagement of alumni and friends across program and events hosted by the Faculty.

At the Annual General Meeting, held virtually on April 28, new Council members elected to a three-year term include:

The Enigmatic W.P.M. Kennedy: The Champlain Society podcast with University Professor and Dean Emeritus Martin L. Friedland

Tuesday, May 4, 2021

In a new episode of The Champlain Society podcast, host Greg Marchildon interviews legal scholar, University Professor and Dean Emeritus Martin L. Friedland on his biography of the law school's first Dean, W.P.M. Kennedy, Searching for W.P.M. Kennedy: The Biography of an Enigma (University of Toronto Press 2020).

The Climate Crisis and International Law: Dean Jutta Brunnée in conversation with Bryce Rudyk (JD 2005)

Monday, May 3, 2021

Confronting climate change will require a significant reform of domestic and international economies and politics. Given the range of different national interests, policies, governance and diplomacy at play, can international legal agreements like the Paris Climate Agreement really make a difference? Five years later, what has been accomplished and what's next?

'Completely misunderstood' – University Professor Arthur Ripstein explores Immanuel Kant's views on war

Friday, April 30, 2021

Arthur Ripstein

A colleague of Arthur Ripstein’s once described the 18th century German philosopher Immanuel Kant as “the philosopher for people who like philosophy too much.”

Ripstein freely admits belonging to this group.  He’s spent decades researching and teaching Kantian legal and political philosophy and is currently finishing his latest book about the philosopher, Kant and the Law of War. It will be available in September.

Innovative new Oxford University Press book series on Ethics in Context launched by Professor Markus Dubber

Friday, April 30, 2021

Architecture is a part of daily life that often gets overlooked.

From a simple doorknob to spectacular feats of engineering, such as the 430-metre Zhangjiajie skywalk bridge in China’s Hunan Province, the built environment reflects and responds to societies’ values.

It also raises questions about aesthetics, technology – and ethics.