News
» Go to news mainInaugural Class of 1967 Teaching Awards
On May 28, the Schulich School of Law honoured the first recipients of the Class of 1967 Teaching Awards: Professors Jamie Baxter, Richard Devlin, Colin Jackson, Constance MacIntosh, and Naiomi Metallic. Three members of the Class of 67Diane Campbell, Alan Hayman, and Art Millerwere on hand to present the awards at the law school.
The awards were chosen for two projects. The first, on which Metallic, Baxter, Devlin, and MacIntosh collaborated, is the Aboriginal and Indigenous Law in Context course; funds will go toward updating, building, and enhancing the course through feedback received from students.
We are grateful for the generous gift from the Class of 1967, which is helping further and enhance the important work we have been doing to respond to the TRC Report and advance truth and reconciliation, says Metallic.
The second is Jacksons project, which runs in his Bankruptcy and Insolvency course, where students do an innovative, practical project where they negotiate a plan of arrangement for an insolvent corporation.
I hope this project gives the students the chance to continue developing the skills theyve learned in law school and adds another great experiential learning element to our curriculum, says Jackson. But more than that, Im thankful that the Class of 1967 took the initiative to support advances in teaching at the Schulich School of Law. It says a lot about the quality of our alumni and how highly they value the legal education they received here.
Congratulations to all of the recipients of this inaugural award!
Recent News
- Associate Professor Michael Karanicolas ft in "Bill C9 puts Canadians Charter rights in peril"
- Violet Ford Named Canada Research Chair
- Authoritarianism Rising: Stanfield Conversation Probes How the Rule of Law is Being Subverted
- Associate Professor Violet Ford ft in "From Arctic law to viral epidemics: AV整氈窒's newest Canada Research Chairs are taking on emerging challenges"
- Professor Rob Currie ft in "U.S. prosecutors will not seek the death penalty for Canadian accused in transnational drug ring case"
- Professor Sheila Wildeman ft in "Feds promise to reform bail and sentencing, particularly targeting violent and repeat offenders"
- Advancing Canadas Reconciliation
- AV整氈窒 Legal Aid Service ft in "Report finds tenants rights at risk in Nova Scotia, issues go unaddressed"