Law Archives | Research & Innovation /research/category/law/ Thu, 30 Jan 2025 17:20:05 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Professor co-edits book on remorse and criminal justice /research/2021/12/10/professor-co-edits-book-on-remorse-and-criminal-justice-2/ Fri, 10 Dec 2021 17:12:00 +0000 /researchdev/2021/12/10/professor-co-edits-book-on-remorse-and-criminal-justice-2/ 91ɫ Professor Richard Weisman is the co-editor of a new book Remorse and Criminal Justice: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives published Nov. 29 by Routledge. Weisman is Professor Emeritus in the Law and Society Program in the Department of Social Science in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies.  For the past two decades, his research has centered […]

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91ɫ Professor Richard Weisman is the co-editor of a new book Remorse and Criminal Justice: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives published Nov. 29 by Routledge.

Weisman is Professor Emeritus in the Law and Society Program in the Department of Social Science in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies.  For the past two decades, his research has centered on exploring the interpenetration of law and moral regulation as well as the interrelationship between legal discourse and popular discourse.

Remorse and Criminal Justice: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives is a multi-disciplinary collection of essays that brings together original contributions on current thinking about the nature and place of remorse in the context of criminal justice. Despite the widespread and long-standing nature of interest in offender remorse, the topic has until recently been peripheral in academic studies. Weisman worked with co-editors Steven Tudor (La Trobe University, Australia), Michael Proeve, (University of Adelaide, Australia), and Kate Rossmanith (Macquarie University, Australia) to bring together a diverse array of contributors who are scholars from North America, the United Kingdom, Europe, South Africa and Australia, and from diverse academic disciplines. The resulting text reflects on the role of remorse in law, for better or for worse; on how expressions of remorse are affected by the legal contexts in which they arise; and on the impact of these expressions on the individual, the court and the community.

The book is divided into four parts – Part one, “Judging Remorse,” addresses issues concerning the task of assessing remorse in the courtroom, usually prior to determining sentence. Part two, “Remorse Beyond the Courtroom,” explores the place and significance of remorse in various post-court settings. Part three, “Remorse, War and Social Trauma,” addresses remorse in the context of political violence and social trauma in the former Yugoslavia and South Africa. Finally, Part four, “Reflections,”seeks to underscore the multi-disciplinary and inter-disciplinary nature of the collection through personal and disciplinary reflections on remorse.

 provides a showcase for how diverse academic disciplines can be brought together through a focus on a common topic. The book is available from Routledge and through .

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Books illustrate thought leadership in Indigenous-formed and -led research /research/2020/03/05/books-illustrate-thought-leadership-in-indigenous-formed-and-led-research-2/ Thu, 05 Mar 2020 10:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2020/03/05/books-illustrate-thought-leadership-in-indigenous-formed-and-led-research-2/ Two new books from Osgoode Hall Law School, on Indigenous research and the relationship between Indigenous peoples and Canada, illustrate 91ɫ’s thought leadership in this field. Professors Deborah McGregor and Karen Drake have produced edited collections that will make lasting contributions. In the coming years, Indigenous leadership in 91ɫ’s collaborative, socially engaged research will create […]

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Two new books from Osgoode Hall Law School, on Indigenous research and the relationship between Indigenous peoples and Canada, illustrate 91ɫ’s thought leadership in this field. Professors Deborah McGregor and Karen Drake have produced edited collections that will make lasting contributions.

In the coming years, Indigenous leadership in 91ɫ’s collaborative, socially engaged research will create a unique space to support contributions to Indigenous knowledges within and beyond the academy.

In articulating this research opportunity, 91ɫ affirms a commitment to respectful, relevant, Indigenous-formed and -led research, scholarship and related creative activity. This research promises positive and critically needed change to policy, practice, community and cultural life and ultimately, relationships among us all.

Deborah McGregor

One way to create this space is through publications that help to shape the research discussion and add to our understanding of this vital area of study. Two professors at Osgoode Hall Law School have done precisely that.

Karen Drake

Karen Drake

ʰǴڱǰDeborah McGregor, also in the Faculty of Environmental Studies, has edited a collection with Jean-Paul Restoule (University of Victoria) and Rochelle Johnston (Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto): Indigenous Research: Theories, Practices, and Relationships (Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2018).

ʰǴڱǰKaren Drake has edited a new book with Brenda Gunn (University of Manitoba): Renewing Relationships: Indigenous Peoples and Canada (Wiyasiwewin Mikiwahp Native Law Centre, University of Saskatchewan, 2019).

McGregor shines a light on how Indigenous approaches to research are carried out in practice

McGregor, who is Anishinaabe from Whitefish River First Nation, Birch Island, Ontario, is a Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Environmental Justice. Her research program seeks to develop a distinctive environmental justice framework based on Indigenous knowledge systems and the lived experience of Indigenous peoples. Her work provides a much deeper understanding of environmental injustices facing Indigenous peoples, and even more importantly, leads to viable approaches to addressing such challenges.

Deborah McGregor’s new book, Indigenous Research. Image reproduced with permission of the publisher.

McGregor’s new collection, Indigenous Research, makes a unique contribution to the literature because it moves beyond asking what Indigenous research is, and examines how Indigenous approaches to research are carried out in practice.

Contributors to this 17-chapter volume share their personal experiences of conducting research within an academic setting in collaboration with their communities and with guidance from Elders and other traditional knowledge keepers.

Topics include healing and transformative learning through Indigenous methodologies, conducting community-based research in First Nation Communities, storytelling in narrative inquiry, and research within relations of violence.

“These stories are linked to current discussions and debates, and their unique journeys reflect the diversity of Indigenous languages, knowledges and approaches to inquiry,” says McGregor.

Drake considers renewing relationships between Indigenous peoples and the Canadian state

Drake is a citizen of the Métis Nation of Ontario whose research interests include Canadian law as it affects Indigenous peoples, Anishinaabe law, Métis law, property law and dispute resolution. Her work addresses the relationship between liberalism and Aboriginal rights, and the role of Aboriginal rights and legal education in promoting reconciliation. She previously served as a commissioner of the Ontario Human Rights Commission, on the Board of Directors of the Indigenous Bar Association, and on the Thunder Bay Métis Council.

Karen Drake’s new book, Renewing Relationships. Image reproduced with permission of the publisher.

Her recent publication, Renewing Relationships, consists of a series of compelling essays by Indigenous legal academics about revitalizing relationships between Canada and Indigenous people. Importantly, it reflects the many differing viewpoints from across the nation. “Some Indigenous nations might embrace principles of reconciliation, while others reject the concept of reconciliation and advocate for resistance or decolonization,” Drake explains.

This book, which features contributions by McGregor, Professor Signa Daum Shanks and doctoral student Robert Clifford, builds on existing literature about Indigenous-Crown relationships that addresses issues such as the inclusion of Indigenous laws, self-determination and the role of the constitution.

The chapters pose vital questions, such as:

  • What is the role of Indigenous law in renewing the relationship between Indigenous peoples and Canada?
  • What does the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples contribute to an understanding of a renewed relationship?
  • What shifts must occur within Canadian institutions to move away from the current colonial relationship?

To learn more about McGregor, visit her . To learn more about her new book, visit . To learn more about Drake, visit her . To learn more about her new collection, visit .

To learn more about Research & Innovation at 91ɫ, follow us at ; watch our new , which profiles current research strengths and areas of opportunity, such as Artificial Intelligence and Indigenous futurities; and see the , a glimpse of the year’s successes.

By Megan Mueller, senior manager, Research Communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, 91ɫ, muellerm@yorku.ca

 

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Osgoode professor finds refugee determinations in Canada woefully subjective /research/2019/11/01/osgoode-professor-finds-refugee-determinations-in-canada-woefully-subjective-2/ Fri, 01 Nov 2019 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2019/11/01/osgoode-professor-finds-refugee-determinations-in-canada-woefully-subjective-2/ New research shows that decisions around Federal Court applications for judicial review of refugee determinations depend on which judge decides the case. Much needs to be done, and one 91ɫ U professor has offered up a compelling list of recommendations for enhancing fairness in the process. Access to justice is the cornerstone of the Canadian […]

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New research shows that decisions around Federal Court applications for judicial review of refugee determinations depend on which judge decides the case. Much needs to be done, and one 91ɫ U professor has offered up a compelling list of recommendations for enhancing fairness in the process.

Access to justice is the cornerstone of the Canadian legal system. Five years ago, Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Sean Rehaag, director of the Centre for Refugee Studies at 91ɫ, led a groundbreaking study that examined access to justice for refugees in Canada. This research concluded that the handling of refugee cases was inconsistent and arbitrary; the outcome depended on which judge decided the case.

With funding from the Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada, Rehaag reinvestigated the same issue half a decade later, but found that little has changed. “The luck of the draw remains a stubbornly persistent feature of the judicial review process. This is unacceptable,” Rehaag says. “Refugee determinations involve life and death questions. Change is urgently needed.”

Refugees could be subjected to torture, cruel and unusual treatment or punishment, or death if they were returned to their country of nationality

This increasingly relevant and timely work, the findings of which were accepted for publication in the Queen’s Law Journal (2019), could not be more policy applicable.

Refugees represent an acutely vulnerable population

A snapshot of immigration and refugees underscores the importance of this kind of research for Canada. First, immigration is growing:

  • Newcomers represent nearly 22 per cent of today’s population – this could topple the record number (22 per cent) recorded in the 1921 census, the highest level since Confederation (StatsCan, 2016 census).
  • According to StatCan’s projections, the proportion of Canada’s foreign-born population could reach up to 30 per cent by 2036.

Second, refugee numbers are growing. While refugees represented 10 per cent of all immigrants in 2014, this percentage grew to 24 in 2016 (StatsCan, 2016 census).

Reflecting this influx, the number of refugee claims in Canada has risen from more than 10,000 in 2013 to more than 47,000 in 2017, according to Rehaag.

Refugees represent a vulnerable population. They face persecution in their country of nationality based on race, religion, nationality, and/or membership in a particular social or political group. If they were returned to their country of nationality, they could be subjected to a danger of torture, to a risk to their lives, or to a risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment.

Refugee claims have risen from 10,000-plus in 2013 to 47,000-plus in 2017

Study designed to check back with the system after earlier research

As mentioned, Rehaag’s research updates an earlier study of decision-making in the refugee law context in Canada’s Federal Court. The initial study, which looked at 23,000 applicants from 2005 to 2010, found that outcomes in Federal Court applications for judicial review of refugee determinations depended all too often on the luck of the draw – which judge decided the case. Rehaag found that individual judges granted leave at very different rates. (Applicants who want the Federal Court to review their refugee determination must first apply for “leave,” or permission from the court.)

A note about process: Federal Court judges do not grant (or refuse) refugee status. Instead, they hear applications for judicial review of decisions made by Immigration & Refugee Board (IRB) members. If they grant an application for judicial review of a negative refugee determination, it does not mean that they are granting refugee protection; it just means that they are overturning the initial decision and sending the case back down to the IRB to be redetermined. There, at this stage, the IRB could choose to grant or not grant refugee protection.

Since the initial study, the Federal Court adopted measures to address these variations. It was in this context that Rehaag wanted to check in again and see if the new measures were effective. This time, in September 2016, he collected data from over 33,000 court dockets from 2008 to 2016. He used a computer program’s written code to parse data from online court dockets, then he optimized the code, through trial and error, to improve the accuracy rate to 99 per cent.

Key findings indicate more work needs to be done

Sean Rehaag

The findings of this study show that the situation hasn’t changed much since the past research was undertaken.

“From 2013 to 2016, if a claimant was lucky with leave judge assignment, then they were more than ten times more likely to succeed with their application than if they were unlucky with leave judge assignment,” Rehaag explains. “Most importantly, this isn’t a phenomenon restricted to a handful of outlier judges.”

Policy recommendations aimed at key actors in legal system

Rehaag has some compelling recommendations for reform.

  1. For Parliament: abolish or reform the leave requirement. He believes that refugee claimants should not need to go through a leave requirement, which has proven to be an arbitrary barrier.
  2. For the court: same judge for leave and merits. In most applications for judicial review where leave is granted, a different judge decides the case on the merits at the judicial review stage than the judge who decided to grant leave. Rehaag suggests that this judge be the same in both cases. “This would stop amplifying the luck of the draw to the disadvantage of refugee claimants,” he explains.
  3. For judges: alternative judicial processes. To avoid subjectivity, Rehaag suggests that the leave judge not consider whether they think a reasonably arguable case has been made, but rather consider whether any of their colleagues might be of the view that the applicant has presented a reasonably arguable case.

Rehaag presses for change. “The time for study is over. It’s now time for action,” he emphasizes.

To read the working draft of the article “Judicial Review of Refugee Determinations (II): Revisiting the Luck of the Draw,” which will be published in the Queen’s Law Journal (2019), visit the . To read the original research, visit the . To learn more about Rehaag, visit his.

To learn more about Research & Innovation at 91ɫ, follow us at ; watch our new , which profiles current research strengths and areas of opportunity such as artificial intelligence and Indigenous futurities; and see the  for a glimpse of the year’s successes.

By Megan Mueller, senior manager, research communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, 91ɫ, muellerm@yorku.ca

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Osgoode-led project on access to justice could reorient policy discussions /research/2018/05/07/osgoode-led-project-on-access-to-justice-could-reorient-policy-discussions-2/ Mon, 07 May 2018 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2018/05/07/osgoode-led-project-on-access-to-justice-could-reorient-policy-discussions-2/ SSHRC-funded project investigates the problem of access to justice, brings to light new information around health and equity, and promises to inform future thought around research and policy.

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SSHRC-funded project investigates the problem of access to justice, brings to light new information around health and equity, and promises to inform future thought around research and policy.

Canada’s justice system is arguably the foundation of our society. The rule of law, freedom under the law, democratic principles and respect for others are the bedrock of our nation’s legal heritage. Lack of access to this system is a serious problem.

Access to justice is essential in the Canadian judicial system. Photo courtesy of the Supreme Court of Canada

Access to justice is essential in the Canadian judicial system. Photo courtesy of the Supreme Court of Canada

Trevor Farrow

Trevor Farrow

 

Seven years ago, the Canadian Forum on Civil Justice (CFCJ), a research organization at Osgoode Hall Law School, was awarded a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) grant for a multi-year study on the economic and social costs of Canada’s justice system, titled the “Cost of Justice: Weighing the Fair and Effective Resolution to Legal Problems.”

Osgoode Professor Trevor Farrow is the Principal Investigator for the project and the lead author on one of the project’s leading reports, Everyday Legal Problems and the Cost of Justice in Canada: Overview Report (2016). Based on a survey of over 3,000 Canadians, this report highlights the extent of the problem and the fact that legal problems, health problems and social issues are linked. It also raises some important equity issues.

“This is the first national legal needs study in Canada that looks at the issue of cost – financial and social. The data that this project brings to light are already informing future access to justice thinking in Canada and abroad,” Farrow says.

Historic and comprehensive assessment of access in Canada

The magnitude of this project cannot be underestimated. The research alliance involved in this project is made up of academics, government departments, law commissions, law societies, bar associations, public legal educators and other experts from Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States.

The project essentially asked four main questions:

  • What does the civil justice system cost?
  • Who does it serve?
  • How well is it meeting the needs of the Canadian public?
  • What is the price of failing to meet the legal needs of Canadians?

Project connects legal problems to social, health and equity issues

Key facts were brought to light in this project. (For the purposes of this article, we will focus on the social- and health-related costs.) To start, the size of the problem is larger than one might assume. In a given three-year period, almost half of Canadian adults will experience at least one everyday legal problem – that is, a problem that occurs in the course of daily life that has a civil legal dimension and that could potentially be resolved through the court system.

Legal problems cluster and often lead to social and health issues

 

Additionally, legal problems are often linked to health and social issues, such as unemployment, housing, depression, money problems, divorce, etc. Eighty-two per cent of people reporting a family law problem experience a related health or social problem. Thirty-eight per cent of people with an everyday legal problem reported developing a health or social issue in direct response to that problem.

A third major finding is equity based. There is an unequal distribution of these issues: low income, vulnerable and marginalized populations experience a greater share of these problems.

Family, money, health, employment and housing problems are often linked to legal problems

Findings are reorienting research and policy discussions

The project’s approach and the focus on users of the justice system have provided useful and unique insights into the state of civil justice in Canada today and what needs to be done to:

  • Equip Canadians with the tools and resources to manage their everyday civil justice problems and needs;
  • Empower individuals to participate in an engaged society that prevents disputes and addresses social issues of inequity and exclusion; and
  • Provide an accessible civil justice system centred around multiple points of entry.

This project provides insights on what needs to be done to equip people with the tools to manage their everyday civil justice problems and needs

Farrow says that this project is already playing a significant role in helping to reorient research and policy conversations toward an understanding by justice stakeholders of the needs of users of the justice system, and its costs.

“We must consider these issues from the point of view of those who use the system – the public,” he says. Farrow’s hope is that the project will inform and shape key public discussions around access to justice and our collective legal wellbeing.

To learn more about Farrow, visit his . To read more about the “Cost of Justice” project and the CFCJ, visit the . For more information on “The Cost of Justice” project, see the .  To read the report, Everyday Legal Problems and the Cost of Justice in Canada: Overview Report (2016), visit the .

To learn more about Research & Innovation at 91ɫ, follow us at , watch the and see the .

By Megan Mueller, manager, research communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, 91ɫ, muellerm@yorku.ca

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From tea to 3D, 91ɫ opens YSpace, a new innovation hub in Markham /research/2017/11/07/from-tea-to-3d-york-university-opens-yspace-a-new-innovation-hub-in-markham-2/ Tue, 07 Nov 2017 10:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2017/11/07/from-tea-to-3d-york-university-opens-yspace-a-new-innovation-hub-in-markham-2/ 91ɫ announced the official opening of YSpace, its new innovation and entrepreneurship centre in Markham aimed at helping budding entrepreneurs turn bright ideas into action. The opening event took place Monday, Nov. 6. Entrepreneurs from Studio 1 Labs, which has developed a functional bed sheet patient monitor, explain the device’s function to 91ɫ […]

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91ɫ announced the official opening of , its new innovation and entrepreneurship centre in Markham aimed at helping budding entrepreneurs turn bright ideas into action. The opening event took place Monday, Nov. 6.

Entrepreneurs from Studio 1 Labs, which has developed a functional bed sheet patient monitor, explain the device’s function to 91ɫ President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda Lenton and City of Markham Mayor Frank Scarpitti at the opening of YSpace

Entrepreneurs from Studio 1 Labs, which has developed a functional bed sheet patient monitor, explain the device’s function to 91ɫ President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton and City of Markham Mayor Frank Scarpitti at the opening of YSpace

91ɫ President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton was joined by Markham Mayor Frank Scarpitti and International Trade Minister Michael Chan (MPP Markham-Unionville) to mark the occasion. A number of 91ɫ’s key entrepreneurs showcased their technologies and products in the YSpace “maker space” and “co-working space.”

91ɫ’s new co-working and maker space offers students and community entrepreneurs and innovators a place to build and scale their ventures and connect with industry and not-for-profit partners, and provides them with access to programs designed to build their entrepreneurial skills.

With 91ɫ’s  campus scheduled to open in 2021, the University is actively taking steps to cultivate new connections that foster a strong and growing culture of teaching, learning, research and innovation.

“This exciting new phase of 91ɫ’s investment in Markham will help to shape our relationship for years to come,” said Lenton. “YSpace will serve as a vital hub in Markham where students, educators, business leaders and inventors can come together to collaborate. YSpace will also importantly support our commitment to ensuring that every student has an experiential education opportunity, while showcasing 91ɫ’s commitment to increasing access to a high-quality, research-intensive university education, enhancing our connectedness to our communities, and contributing to the social and economic impact of the region through innovation and entrepreneurship. We look forward to many years of building 91ɫ and Markham together.”

Studio 1 Labs shows 91ɫ’s president and MPP Michael Chan how their functional bed sheet patient monitor works

“YSpace is the perfect fit for our city,” said Scarpitti. “We are thrilled to be partnering with 91ɫ.  This new innovative hub is where great thinkers, innovators and entrepreneurs will join forces to excel in a knowledge-based world economy while building on Markham’s stellar reputation for having a highly educated, skilled and diverse workforce. I’m also excited high school students will have access to YSpace, which will set them on the path to success.”

YSpace builds on the success of , the University’s innovation office. Innovation 91ɫ’s goal is to facilitate and maximize the commercial, economic, and social impacts of research and innovation, and to create a culture of engaged scholarship and experiential learning.

“Innovation 91ɫ, 91ɫ’s innovation office, offers entrepreneurs and innovators an opportunity to become a part of community at YSpace Markham,” said Vice-President Research and Innovation Robert Haché. “A community that is supportive, that offers training programs to develop skill sets, co-working space, and facilities to build prototypes and even products, is essential if we are going to support entrepreneurs and give them the best opportunity for success.”

A dozen startups that have benefited from ’s programs and services were at the official opening of YSpace to demonstrate how they have transformed their bright ideas into products and services, including: a cloud-based health-care analytics platform that helps hospitals improve their efficiency and reduce costs; a new freeze drying technology that addresses the problems of affordability and efficiency of current freeze dryers; technology that provides media and entertainment options to users in rideshare cars and tracks behaviour; and, finally, a one-stop shop for senior care.

Courtesy of YFile.

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Timely new book cuts to the heart of religious pluralism /research/2017/03/03/timely-new-book-cuts-to-the-heart-of-religious-pluralism-2/ Fri, 03 Mar 2017 10:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2017/03/03/timely-new-book-cuts-to-the-heart-of-religious-pluralism-2/ Prof Benjamin Berger of 91ɫ’s Osgoode Hall Law School edits provocative new book on religion and public authority that promises to have ripple effect into public policy.

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Prof Benjamin Berger of 91ɫ’s Osgoode Hall Law School edits provocative new book on religion and public authority that promises to have ripple effect into public policy.

Should a public official be entitled to refuse to officiate a same-sex marriage on religious grounds?  Should a doctor, citing religious objections, be exempted from participating in physician-assisted death? These are the issues raised by Osgoode Law Professor Benjamin Berger, together with University of Windsor Law Professor Richard Moon, in a timely new book that unites an interdisciplinary group of top Canadian scholars around such contentious questions that affect those who are involved in exercising public power, and cuts to the heart of religious pluralism and state neutrality.

<Caption> Religion and the Exercise of Public Authority raises some key questions for public policy, such as whether or not a public official could refuse to officiate a same-sex marriage on religious grounds.

Religion and the Exercise of Public Authority raises some key questions for public policy, such as whether or not a public official could refuse to officiate a same-sex marriage on religious grounds

This policy-relevant book, Religion and the Exercise of Public Authority, published in 2016 by Hart Publishing (United Kingdom), is sure to attract global interest inside the academy, across a variety of disciplines − public policy, sociology, law, religion, equity, human rights − and outside of the academy into the public and political realms.

<Caption> Berger and Moon’s 2016 book. Image reproduced with permission from Hart Publishing.

Berger and Moon’s 2016 book. Image reproduced with permission from Hart Publishing

“The book reminds us that the state isn’t an abstract entity, but embodied in individuals, actors who are invested with commitments and identities, and called upon to discharge specific duties,” write Berger and Moon.

Area of study seeks to reflect, interpret larger social issues

Law and religion, an emerging field in the world of academia, is an area of study that reflects and tries to interpret larger social issues.

To date, the field of law and religion has tended to focus on secularism, the idea of tolerance and the scope of religious freedom. But this new book digs deeper to consider the role that religion plays in the public arena and how it affects the decisions and experiences of those in positions of public authority.

Questions the idea of state neutrality; shows its limitations

This book sheds light on the concepts that are often used to organize and manage religious diversity – chiefly, the idea of state neutrality – and, reveals the limitations of this governing ideal.

As global experts in this field, Berger and Moon bring together leading scholars from across Canada: Osgoode/91ɫ contributors Faisal Bhabha, Amélie Barras and Bruce Ryder are joined by the University of Toronto’s Pamela Klassen and University of Ottawa’s Lori Beaman. Jocelyn Maclure, Laval University; Daniel Weinstock and Shauna Van Praagh, McGill University; Paul Bramadat, University of Victoria; Jennifer Selby, Memorial; and Solange Lefebvre, University of Montreal, are also contributors.

Chapters paint comprehensive picture

Each chapter focuses on a distinct aspect of this complex issue. Collectively, the contributions paint a comprehensive picture. Examples include:

  • Klassen discusses how public officials in the early 20th century made Christian claims about Canada and the land that were in direct competition with Indigenous ideas of the land in an effort to firm up state sovereignty.
  • Moon, writing on same-sex marriage, concludes that civil servants have no claim to be excused from performing the tasks, simply because they are morally opposed to government policy.
  • Weinstock believes that the state’s limitation of religious education might actually be necessary for the realization of the religious freedom of parents, while Van Praagh’s chapter argues that public education is an intrinsically interfaith enterprise.

<Caption> One contributor suggests that public education is an intrinsically interfaith enterprise.

One contributor suggests that public education is an intrinsically interfaith enterprise

  • Ryder’s chapter on physician-assisted death explores how the work of doctors can be intertwined with religious identity, so much so that a considerable moral toll is placed on the doctor’s identity.
  • Picking up on high-profile debates in Quebec and across Canada on what neutrality means (“Charter of Secularism” debates), Maclure considers whether public officials should be prohibited from wearing conspicuous religious symbols. He concludes that banning officials from wearing religious signs is unacceptable due to the toll that such a ban would place on officials with strongly held religious beliefs.
  • Berger’s chapter contends that bans on judges wearing religious symbols are not only indefensible in light of diversity and inclusion but also unappealing in the light of the role that judges play in a diverse society. Berger says that allowing officials to wear religious symbols may enhance the legitimacy of public functions.
  • Bhabha’s chapter, which considers that relationship between lawyers and religion, asks what might be lost or sacrificed by an overzealous insistence on separating a person’s religious self from their public role.

    A doctor’s personal views on physician-assisted death take a high moral toll.

    A doctor’s personal views on physician-assisted death take a high moral toll

“A judgment by the state suggesting that the beliefs of one group are less true than another may be experienced as a denial of one’s equal worth, or  the marginalization of one’s religious community.”– Benjamin Berger

Book underscores complexity of religious identity

The book explores the complexities that arise for public policy from treating religion as a deep part of the identity of both individuals and groups. One sentence sums this up: “A judgment by the state suggesting that the beliefs of one group are less true than another may be experienced as a denial of one’s equal worth, or the marginalization of one’s religious community.”

Berger’s scholarly monograph, Law’s Religion: Religious Difference and the Claims of Constitutionalism © University of Toronto Press 2015. Image reproduced with permission.

Berger’s scholarly monograph, Law’s Religion: Religious Difference and the Claims of Constitutionalism. Image reproduced with permission

The editors believe that the insights generated in this edited collection will spread to a wide audience, “teaching us something more general about the complexity of identity, the nature of the liberal state, and the challenges of public life in a condition of deep religious pluralism.”

Berger also contributes to the advancement of scholarship with original work in the areas of law and religion, criminal and constitutional law and theory, and the law of evidence.

Berger’s monograph, Law’s Religion, which studies constitutional law and religious difference in Canada, was published by the University of Toronto (U of T) Press in 2015.

To read about Berger, visit .

To learn more about the book, visit

For more information on Law’s Religion, go to

By Megan Mueller, manager, research communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, 91ɫ, muellerm@yorku.ca

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Strong showing for Osgoode in Canadian Lawyer's top 25 ranking /research/2013/08/15/strong-showing-for-osgoode-in-canadian-lawyers-top-25-ranking-2/ Thu, 15 Aug 2013 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2013/08/15/strong-showing-for-osgoode-in-canadian-lawyers-top-25-ranking-2/ Osgoode Hall Law School Dean Lorne Sossin (LLB '92), grads David Brown (LLM '05), Norie Campbell (LLB '95, LLM '03), Michael Geist (LLB '92), Brian Greenspan (LLB '71) and Honorary Degree recipient Rosalie Abella (LLD [Hon.] '91) are on Canadian Lawyer magazine's 2013 list of the 25 most influential lawyers in Canada. The list was […]

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CanadianLawyer-VOsgoode Hall Law School Dean Lorne Sossin (LLB '92), grads David Brown (LLM '05), Norie Campbell (LLB '95, LLM '03), Michael Geist (LLB '92), Brian Greenspan (LLB '71) and Honorary Degree recipient Rosalie Abella (LLD [Hon.] '91) are on magazine's 2013 list of the 25 most influential lawyers in Canada. The list was published in the August 2013 issue of the magazine.

"The Top 25 is about a level of respect, the ability to influence public opinion and help shape the laws of this country; contribution to the strength and quality of legal services; and social and political influence and involvement," writes Gail Cohen, editor of Canadian Lawyer magazine, in her introduction to "The Top 25 Most Influential".

For the second year in a row, Osgoode Hall Law School Dean Sossin made the list in the Changemakers category. Sossin was praised for his important role in Canadian legal education with the magazine making a special note of his leadership role in experiential education. "With the Law Society of Upper Canada planning radical changes to legal licensing in Ontario, Sossin's novel and creative approaches to legal education promise to play an important role in the profession in the coming years," noted the magazine.

Justice David Brown, a judge on the Ontario Superior Court in Toronto, was also included in the Changemakers category. Brown was lauded for his colourful delivery and outspoken judgements. Canadian Lawyer magazine noted Brown's criticism of "the motions culture" in which he decried the actions by "lawyers preferring to bring complex motions rather than settle matters through a civil trial".

Making the list as part of the In-house Counsel category, Osgoode grad Norie Campbell, top legal counsel for the Toronto Dominion (TD) Bank, leads a team of more than 60 lawyers. She also appears on the top 40 under 40 list. Canadian Lawyer made special mention of Campbell's important role in the bank "at a time when TD is making serious inroads into the US market". Campbell is also active in the United Way.

In the Corporate-Commercial Law category, University of Ottawa Professor and Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law, Michael Geist, is marking his third year on the Canadian Lawyer list. His column appears in the Toronto Star and Ottawa Citizen newspapers, and he is an author and blogs regularly on copyright law. "Through his academic work and public outreach, Geist illuminates issues surround copyright law and the Internet," noted the magazine.

Appearing in the Criminal Law/Human Rights category, Osgoode alumnus Brian Greenspan, a partner in the Toronto firm Greenspan HumphreyLavine, made the list for his continuing leadership in Canadian criminal law. The publication referred to his work to help "redefine the scope of the defence of duress now available to all accused". Greenspan appeared on the magazine's first top 25 list that was published in 2010.

Also appearing in the Criminal Law/Human Rights category is Justice Rosalie Abella, a judge of the Supreme Court of Canada. Abella was awarded an honorary doctor of laws degree in 1991 by 91ɫ for her leadership role in human rights law. "Abella was the sole dissenter in the 2012 case of R. v. N.S.," noted the publication, "where she argued that requiring a witness to remove her niqab would effectively force her to choose between her religious beliefs and participating in the justice system."

Full details are available on the  magazine website.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Professor Emeritus Jean-Gabriel Castel awarded France's highest honour /research/2013/08/14/professor-emeritus-jean-gabriel-castel-awarded-frances-highest-honour-2/ Wed, 14 Aug 2013 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2013/08/14/professor-emeritus-jean-gabriel-castel-awarded-frances-highest-honour-2/ Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Emeritus Jean-Gabriel Castel has added another prestigious decoration to the long list of awards he has received for service to France, Canada and the French community, and for contributions to legal education and the legal profession. Jean-Gabriel Castel On Bastille Day (July 14), French President François Hollande promoted Castel to […]

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Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Emeritus Jean-Gabriel Castel has added another prestigious decoration to the long list of awards he has received for service to France, Canada and the French community, and for contributions to legal education and the legal profession.

castel_storyimageJean-Gabriel Castel

On Bastille Day (July 14), French President François Hollande promoted Castel to Officier de l'Ordre national de la Légion d'honneur (Officer of the National Order of the Legion of Honour). The order is the highest decoration in France and is divided into five degrees: chevalier (knight), officier (officer), commandeur (commander), grand officier (grand officer) and grand croix (grand cross).

The promotion to Officer of the National Order of the Legion of Honour recognizes Castel’s continuous support of French language and culture and the development of relations between France and Canada at all levels. In addition, Castel holds other decorations from France’s Ordre national du Mérite ԻOrdre des Palmes Académiques, and is an associate member of the Académie du Var.

Castel, who was a professor of French and Canadian law at Osgoode from 1959 until his retirement in 1999, has reached great heights in his lifetime and is recognized for many achievements, including:

  • his service in the French Resistance during World War II for which he received several military decorations;
  • his presidency of the French War Veterans from Ontario and Manitoba for 25 years;
  • a role as an elected representative of the French people in Canada (he was elected three times to the Assembly of the French Abroad in Paris);
  • his presidency of the Private International Law Committee of the Office of Revision of the Civil Code, drafting the part of the code dealing with conflict of laws along with numerous books and publications;
  • the creation of the French school Bishop de Charbonnel in Toronto;
  • his role with Judge Lacoursiere and R. Roy McMurtry when he was Ontario’s Attorney General in making Ontario law and courts bilingual (for which he received the Order of Ontario);
  • a 27-year history as the editor-in-chief of the Canadian Bar Review, which with the support of his friend Louis St. Laurent  Castel transformed into a bilingual review (for which he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada); and
  • his contribution to the development of public and private international law (for which an annual lecture in his honour was created at Glendon College several years ago, and he received the Mundell and Read medals).

The author of numerous books, including the celebrated three-volume treatise Canadian Conflict of Laws, Castel earned degrees at the universities of Paris, Michigan and Harvard. He was on the Faculty of Law at McGill University (1954 to 1959) before moving to 91ɫ's Osgoode Hall Law School.

Castel is also a Queen’s Counsel in Ontario, a member of the Royal Society of Canada and a Distinguished Research Professor at 91ɫ.

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Symposium will link arms together for rights of indigenous people /research/2013/06/28/symposium-will-link-arms-together-for-rights-of-indigenous-people-2/ Fri, 28 Jun 2013 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2013/06/28/symposium-will-link-arms-together-for-rights-of-indigenous-people-2/ Former students of residential schools for aboriginal people, members of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and representatives of the United Nations and human rights organizations will all converge at 91ɫ for a symposium aptly titled Linking Arms Together, to join hands in upholding aboriginal rights, Friday. Linking Arms Together, a public symposium, will take […]

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Former students of residential schools for aboriginal people, members of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and representatives of the United Nations and human rights organizations will all converge at 91ɫ for a symposium aptly titled Linking Arms Together, to join hands in upholding aboriginal rights, Friday.

Linking Arms Together, a public symposium, will take place June 28, from 9am to 5:30pm, in Osgoode Hall-Moot Court, Kaneff Building, Keele campus.

Speakers will bring ideas to bear on the process of reconciliation using the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The symposium will also provide opportunities to reach out to other PeterDawsoncommunities, educate the public and also create networks of solidarity, says key organizer Professor Peter Dawson of the Department of Sociology in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies. The symposium is also organized and sponsored by the Centre for Human Rights at 91ɫ and the  Department of Equity Studies.

The symposium, whose title recalls the Mohawk teaching based on the sacred wampum that emphasizes the importance of co-operation and solidarity among aboriginal communities, marks the 250th anniversary of the Royal Proclamation of 1763, which continues to be of legal importance to First Nations in Canada.

Some of the speakers will include the following:

Marlene Brant CastellanoProfessor Emeritus Marlene Brant Castellano of Trent University, a longstanding member of the Native Studies department and an Officer of the Order of Canada, served as chair of the department from 1989 until 1991, during which time she became co-director of Research for the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. She is a member of the Mohawk Nation, Bay of Quinte Band, who has also pursued careers as a social worker in child and family services. She also serves on the Institute Advisory board of the CIHR Institute of Aboriginal Peoples' Health and the College of Reviewers for Canada Research Chairs.

JohnMilloyProfessor John Milloy of Trent University is one of the country’s leading experts on residential schools. He was appointed director of Research, Historical Records and Report Preparation with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. In 2008, Milloy received approval from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission to carry out an extensive research project that aimed to reveal what actually happened to the children who did not survive Canada’s residential school system. Previously, he served an adviser to the working group of church, Aboriginal and federal government representatives that laid out for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission a plan for filling in gaps in information about how many children died, what they died of and where they are buried. He is author of the book, A National Crime: The Canadian Government and the Residential School System, 1879 to 1986. In 2005, the Literary Review of Canada selected it as one of the 100 most important books in Canadian history.

MarieWilsonA commissioner with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Marie Wilson has more than 30 years of professional experience as an award-winning journalist, trainer and senior executive manager. She has also been a university lecturer, a high school teacher in Africa, a senior executive manager in both federal and territorial crown corporations, and an independent contractor and consultant in journalism, program evaluation, and project management. She has lived, studied and worked in cross-cultural environments for almost 40 years, including Europe, Africa and various parts of Canada. As a journalist, she worked in print, radio and television as a regional and national reporter, and later as the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's senior manager for northern Quebec and the three northern Territories. Wilson is the recipient of a CBC North Award for Lifetime Achievement and the Northerner of the Year Award.

Grand Chief Edward John, a Hereditary Chief of Tl'azt'en Nation on the banks of the Nak'al Bun (Stuart Lake) in Northern British Columbia, has dedicated his life to the pursuit of social and economic justice for Canada’s indigenous people. He has worked as a leader in Indigenous politics, business and community development and been a lawyer for over 30 years. He is currently serving his 10th consecutive term on the First Nations Summit Task Group and was recently reappointed for a second three-year term as a North American Representative to the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (January 2014 to December 2016).

RomeoSaganashRomeo Saganash, NDP MP Abitibi – Baie-James – Nunavik – Eeyou, was raised in the small northern community of Waswanipi, Quebec, is a residential school survivor and a graduate of the University of Quebec at Montreal law school. He is fluent in Cree, both of Canada’s official languages. He was one of the negotiators of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. As Deputy Grand Chief of the Grand Council of the Cree, he also participated in the negotiation of the Charlottetown Accord, and in 1985, founded the Cree Nation Youth Council.

Ellen Gabriel was chosen by the People of the Longhouse and her community of Kanien’kehá:ka Nation to be their spokesperson during the 1990 Oka Crisis; to protect the Pines from the expansion of a nine-hole golf course in Oka. For the past 22 years she has been a human rights advocate for the collective and individual rights of Indigenous peoples and has worked diligently to sensitize the public, academics, policing authorities and politicians  on the history, culture and identity of Indigenous peoples. She has been active at the international level participating at the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous issues, negotiations on the Nagoya Protocol of the Convention on Biodiversity and most recently, at the UN Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

Jennifer Preston is the program coordinator for Aboriginal Affairs for Canadian Friends Service Committee (Quakers). Her work in recent years has focused on Indigenous peoples' human rights at the international level, including the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. She was actively involved in the intensive lobbying efforts to ensure the successful adoption of the Declaration at the United Nations in both Geneva and New 91ɫ. She is a co-editor and contributor of Realizing the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: Triumph, Hope and Action (Purich Publishers, 2010).

Paul Joffe is a member of the Quebec and Ontario bars. He represents the Grand Council of the Crees (Eeyou Istchee) and collaborates with numerous Indigenous and human rights organizations in different regions of the world. He specializes in human rights and other issues relating to Indigenous peoples at the international and domestic level. His active involvement in international standard-setting processes includes those relating to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples; the draft American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples at the Organization of American States; and the Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention, 1989. He is a co-editor and contributor of Realizing the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: Triumph, Hope and Action.

Craig Benjamin works for Amnesty International in Canada as staff campaigner for the human rights of Indigenous Peoples. Amnesty International’s work in Canada includes the Stolen Sisters campaign though which Amnesty has worked with Indigenous women’s organizations to focus attention on the high rates of violence faced by Indigenous women; campaigns for recognition and protection of Indigenous peoples’ rights to land and water; promoting equitable access to essential services such as safe drinking water and family services; and promotion of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Benjamin represented Amnesty International at the UN Working Group on the Declaration in the final years of its work.

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From prof to publisher of award-winning public policy book /research/2012/05/11/from-prof-to-publisher-of-award-winning-public-policy-book-2/ Fri, 11 May 2012 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2012/05/11/from-prof-to-publisher-of-award-winning-public-policy-book-2/ Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Paul Emond wears many hats, but it’s his publishing business that has grabbed the limelight recently. On May 1, it was announced that Democratizing the Constitution: Reforming Responsible Government by Peter Aucoin, Mark Jarvis and Lori Turnbull, and published by Emond Montgomery Publications, had won the $50,000 Donner Prize for […]

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Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Paul Emond wears many hats, but it’s his publishing business that has grabbed the limelight recently.

On May 1, it was announced that by Peter Aucoin, Mark Jarvis and Lori Turnbull, and published by Emond Montgomery Publications, had won the $50,000 for the best public policy book in 2011 by a Canadian.

Paul Emond

Emond, who is the director of Osgoode’s Professional Master of Laws in Alternative Dispute Resolution Program, founded Emond Montgomery Publications Limited in 1978 with Ann Montgomery and developed it into one of Canada’s top academic publishers.

What started with Emond’s idea to build better teaching materials for Canadian law students, “led to a company that has not only become a leading a voice in Canadian academic and school publishing, but a strong voice in stimulating public policy debate in Canada,” he said in an e-mail message.

The winner of the Donner Prize was chosen from an impressive list of 58 submissions and a shortlist of four by the distinguished five-member jury comprised of:  A. Anne McLellan, former MP and distinguished scholar in residence to the at the Institute for United States Policy Studies (Jury Chair); Wendy Dobson, professor at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto and director of the Institute for International Business; Kevin Lynch, Canadian economist and former clerk of the Privy Council and secretary to the Cabinet, who is now chair of BMO Financial Group; Marcel Boyer, Bell Canada Professor of industrial economics at the University of Montreal;  and Denis Stairs, professor emeritus in political science and a Faculty Fellow of the Centre of Foreign Policy Studies at Dalhousie University.

The Donner Prize jury described Democratizing the Constitution as "an important and timely book -- one that calls into question the legitimacy of our most fundamental institutions of democracy."  Aucoin, who died last July, was professor emeritus of political science and public administration at Dalhousie University. Mark Jarvis is a doctoral candidate at the University of Victoria, and Lori Turnbull is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at Dalhousie University.

The Donner Prize, established in 1998, annually rewards excellence and innovation in Canadian public policy thinking, writing and research in Canada. In bestowing this award, the Donner Canadian Foundation seeks to broaden policy debates, increase general awareness of the importance of policy decision making and make an original and meaningful contribution to policy discourse.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

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