Asper Centre Constitutional Roundtable with Professor David Vitale

The Asper Centre is pleased to present a Consitutional Roundtable with Professor David Vitale (University of Warwick School of Law) on his recently published monograph (2024) with CUP (in the Cambridge Studies in Constitutional Law series) titled 

Asper Centre Constitutional Roundtable with Prof Richard Bellamy

Constitutional Roundtable with Professor Richard Bellamy

November 12 @ 12:45 pm - 2:00 pm

The Asper Centre is pleased to present a lunchtime Constitutional Roundtable by 

Florence Robert

SJD Candidate
Thesis title:
Revitalizing the Ilnu Legal Order and Reclaiming Jurisdiction over Child and Family Services
Office in Falconer Hall
84 Queen's Park
Toronto, M5S 2C5

Florence Robert is a doctoral candidate at the Faculty of Law of the University of Toronto with research interest in Indigenous legal orders, pedagogies and methods. Florence is a 2021 graduate of the LL.L. program at the University of Ottawa where she received the University Gold Medal for Civil Law for the highest cumulative grade point average in the entire civil law program and the Dean of the Civil Law Section’s Prize in recognition significant contributions made to the law school community. In 2022, Florence completed a judicial clerkship at the Federal Court under Justice Martine St-Louis and was called to the Québec bar in 2023. Following her clerkship, Florence completed her Master of Laws (LL.M.) thesis at the University of Toronto on Indigenous legal pedagogy and the decolonization and Indigenization of Canadian legal education under the supervision of Professor John Borrows. Her SJD thesis seeks to document the values, principles, rules, and processes that govern group regulation and conflict resolution related to children, youth, and families within the Ilnu legal order.

Since 2022, Florence is a Part-Time Professor (Long Term Nomination) at the University of Ottawa’s Faculty of Law, where she teaches transsystemic courses in constitutional law, property law, family law and Indigenous legal orders.

Education
Licentiate in Law - University of Ottawa (2021)
Master of Laws (Long Thesis) - University of Toronto (2024)
Awards and Distinctions
2023-2024 Ontario Graduate Scholarship Recipient
University Gold Medal for Civil Law (2021)
Dean of the Civil Law Section’s Prize (2021)
Prix du Barreau du Québec de la Faculté de droit de l’Université d’Ottawa (2021)
Francine Lefebvre-Landry Prize (2021)
Cain Lamarre Prize (2021)
Dean’s Honour list (2018 – 2021)
Professional Affiliations
Member of the Quebec Bar
Selected Publications

Sophie Thériault, Eva Ottawa & Florence Robert, “L’enseignement des traditions juridiques autochtones à la Section de droit civil de l’Université d’Ottawa : entre opportunités et défis pour une formation juridique décolonisée” (2024) 15 Cahiers Portalis (to be published). 

Sophie Thériault, Eva Ottawa & Florence Robert, “First Nations, COVID-19, and the Implications of Spatial Restrictions in a Settler Colonial Context” in Colleen M. Flood, Y.Y. Brandon Chen, Raywat Deonandan, Sam Halabi & Sophie Thériault, eds, Pandemics, Public Health, and the Regulation of Borders: Lessons from COVID-19 (England: Routledge, 2024) 89 (Book Chapter).

Florence Robert, “Pierre Rousseau, Une véritable justice équitable, décolonisée, par et pour les peuples autochtones. Québec : Presses de l’Université Laval, 2023, 220 pp” (2023) 38:2 Canadian Journal of Law and Society / La Revue Canadienne Droit et Société 292 (Book Review).

Aimée Craft, Florence Robert & Caitlin De Simone, “The Canada Water Agency as an Opportunity to Decolonize Water Governance” in Marie-France Fortin, Alexandre Lillo, Éric Champagne, Lauren Touchant & Thomas Burelli, eds, Canada Water Agency: Multisectorial Issues of Law and Governance (Montréal: LexisNexis, 2022) 39 (Book Chapter).

Research Interests
Aboriginal Law
Canadian Constitutional Law
Comparative Law
Family Law
Indigenous Legal Traditions
Supervisor
Committee Members

Constitutional Roundtable with Professor Alison Young

The David Asper Centre for Constitutional Rights’ Constitutional Roundtables are an annual series of lunchtime discussion forums that provide an opportunity to consider developments in Canadian constitutional theory and practice. The Constitutional Roundtable series promotes scholarship and aims to make a meaningful contribution to intellectual discourse about Canadian and comparative constitutional law.

Hai Tran

SJD Candidate
Thesis title:
Land Taking Conflict in East Asian Postsocialist Countries as The Misapplication of Institutional Reform
Office in Falconer Hall
84 Queen's Park
Toronto, M5S 2C5

Hai Tran is a doctoral candidate at the Faculty of Law. He holds a dear interest in the historical evolution of land law, and property rights in general. His doctoral thesis is the explanation of the unique and turbulent property rights compromise between socialist and free market legal norms in postsocialist East Asia. With his research, he seeks to solve the welfare question for the public regarding land redistribution and de-escalate the new ideological cold war of the 21st century. This is tied to his broader investigation of the developments of legal institutions in developing countries which are often ideologically nonconforming and self-contradicting.

Beyond his academic endeavor at the University of Toronto, he is an active member of social activism. He has been involved with the feminist HeForShe project in Japan; CPRE for the protection of the English countryside; Power For People and Repowering London to campaign for and build the capacity of community energy groups in the U.K.

Education
S.J.D University of Toronto (2023-present)
LL.M. King’s College London, United Kingdom (2021-2022)
LL.B. Nagoya University, Japan (2017-2021)
Awards and Distinctions
Best undergraduate thesis, Nagoya University Graduate School of Law (2021)
JASSO Honors Scholarship for Privately Financed International Student (2020-2021)
Selected Publications
Tran, Phuc Hai. “Vietnam’s Land Law Evolution” East Asia Forum, March 13, 2024. https://eastasiaforum.org/2024/03/14/vietnams-land-law-evolution/.
Research Interests
Civil Law
Comparative Law
Environmental Law
Law and Globalization
Legal History
Political Philosophy and Theory
Property Law
Supervisor
Committee Members

Oliver Chan

SJD Candidate
Thesis title:
Laying the Administrative Foundations for a Constitutional Right to Adequate Housing in Canada
Office in Falconer Hall
84 Queen's Park
Toronto, M5S 2C5

Oliver is a doctoral candidate at the Faculty of Law with research interests in public law, political and legal theory, and comparative legal studies. His thesis explores the interpretation and enforcement of positive rights globally as well as the moral purposes of public law and the administrative state. He argues that the constitutional rights to life and equality place obligations on the state to provide safe and affordable housing. Oliver is a graduate of the combined BCL/JD program at McGill University where he received a Lieutenant Governor's Youth Medal from the Honourable J. Michel Doyon for his high academic standing and his work towards improving access to justice in the greater Montréal community. Prior to joining the Faculty of Law, Oliver completed an LLM at Queen's University and worked as the Director of Research for a legal information clinic in Montréal.

Education
LLM, Specialization in Political and Legal Thought: Queen’s University (2023)
BCL & JD: McGill University (2022)
BA (First Class Honours) Political Science & Philosophy: McGill University (2018)
Awards and Distinctions
The Mary And Louis Anisman Fellowship In Law And Fairness (2023-2024)
Lieutenant Governor of Québec Youth Medal (2022)
Fern Gertrude Kennedy Prize in Jurisprudence (2021)
Allan Neil Assh Memorial Award in Business Associations (2021)
Michael L. Garmaise Prize in Political Science (2018)
Maldoff Family Arts Research Internship Award (2017)
Research Group on Constitutional Studies Student Fellow: Yan P. Lin Centre for the Study of Freedom and Global Orders in the Ancient and Modern Worlds (2016-2019)
Research Interests
Administrative Law
Canadian Constitutional Law
Charter of Rights
Comparative Law
Judicial Decision-Making
Legal Theory
Supervisor
Committee Members

Asper Centre Constitutional Roundtable with Professor Michael Beenstock

The David Asper Centre for Constitutional Rights’ Constitutional Roundtables are an annual series of lunchtime discussion forums that provide an opportunity to consider developments in Canadian constitutional theory and practice. The Constitutional Roundtable series promotes scholarship and aims to make a meaningful contribution to intellectual discourse about Canadian and comparative constitutional law.

The Asper Centre presents a Constitutional Roundtable with Professor Michael Beenstock on 

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