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Latest News

Law’16 pays tribute to school’s longest-serving associate dean

On June 3, students, faculty and staff gathered in the Macdonald Hall courtyard with the family of the late Professor Stan Corbett, LLB’95 (BA’66, MA’72, PhD’82) to honour his legacy and his many contributions to Queen’s Law. Members of the Class of Law’16, who graduated later that day, had chosen as their class gift a memorial bench to commemorate their much-loved professor and mentor.

Dual clerkships a family affair for Queen’s Law graduates

When Jeremy Butt, Law’16, begins 24 months of clerkship in the fall, he’s not only embarking on a rare opportunity for law grads – he’s part of a family tradition. Jeremy will first clerk at the Ontario Court of Appeal (OCA), and then next September he will move to the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC), where he will work with Justice Michael Moldaver. He’s starting his career with the same two clerkships as his father, David Butt, Law’86 – but Jeremy intends to make his own mark on the courts.

Queen’s Business Law Clinic collaborates with InnovationXL partners – and a generation of entrepreneurs

For innovators operating in the Kingston area, legal help is now easier to access than ever. A new collaboration between the Queen’s Business Law Clinic (QBLC) in downtown Kingston and InnovationXL partners located at Innovation Park has Kingston entrepreneurs buzzing – and, with any luck, will have students working at the law clinic hopping as well.

Walking 500 miles to fight Parkinson's

Harry McMurtry, Law’89 (Artsci’85), a former Queen’s varsity basketball player, is now putting up a big fight against the illness he suffers from – Parkinson’s disease. With fellow Queen’s grad Sue Thompson (Artsci’87, MA’89) and Dr. Ross Sugar of Baltimore he is taking part in 500 Miles For Parkinson’s. It’s a fundraising walk from New York City to Toronto that started on May 7 and sees the trio travel up to 15 miles a day for 45 days with the goal of raising $500,000.