Professor Sabine Tsuruda is examining how “burdens and restrictions on employees’ speech and associational freedoms can constitute wrongful workplace inequality.” (Photo by Andrew Van Overbeke)
Professor Sabine Tsuruda is examining how “burdens and restrictions on employees’ speech and associational freedoms can constitute wrongful workplace inequality.”
Clinics now offer Queen’s Law students 218 experiential learning opportunities each year. The growth means there are 46 per cent more credit, volunteering, summer and articling opportunities than there were just four years ago.
Jeopardy winner Jordan Nussbaum, Law’15, on the set with host Alex Trebek for what was a “fun” and “pretty surreal” experience. (Photo by Jeopardy! Productions Inc.)
Erik Knutsen, newly appointed Associate Dean (Academic), aims to provide more “opportunities for our world-class scholars to interact with Queen’s Law students in innovative, relevant and exciting ways.”
At “The Whole Lawyer 2.0” conference, 77 professional legal educators from across the country - including 17 Queen’s Law community members – shared their research on topics ranging from ethics to technology as they looked at how to re-orient the framework of legal thinking towards a more modern and comprehensive perspective.
Professor Mohamed Khimji is on a mission to help even more Queen’s Law students "get and be successful in the big business law jobs.” Now two years into his leadership position as the inaugural David Allgood Professor in Business Law, he sat down with the Queen’s Gazette to talk about his experience so far.
After a year of initial service, Loretta Ross, Law’89, has accepted a five-year reappointment as Treaty Relations Commissioner for Manitoba. “I’m delighted, of course,” she says.
Douglas Cardinal, LLD’18 (third right), outside Grant Hall on June 6 with Dean Bill Flanagan; Ovide Mercredi, former National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations; David Sharpe, Law’95, CEO of Bridging Finance Inc.; Mark Dockstator, President of the First Nations University of Canada; and Ann Deer, Indigenous Recruitment and Support Coordinator at Queen’s Law. (Photo by Greg Black)
Douglas Cardinal, a leading voice for reconciliation, took the opportunity in his Convocation address to acknowledge the great strides taken by Queen’s towards reconciliation with Indigenous peoples.
It’s thumbs up for the Class of 2018 as they cap off their years of hard work and determination at Convocation, embarking on bright futures and joining the “proud and passionate” Queen’s Law alumni network. (Photo by Greg Black)
Family, friends, faculty and staff filled historic Grant Hall to cheer on 209 JD, LLM and PhD students and honorary Doctor of Laws recipient Douglas Cardinal receive their degrees.