Windsor Law professor Laverne Jacobs has developed a webinar series to consider ways to improve adjudicative tribunals and administrative justice.
Windsor Law professor Laverne Jacobs has developed a webinar series to consider ways to improve adjudicative tribunals and administrative justice.
Law professor Sujith Xavier will explore issues around racial bias in Canada’s courts in a study funded by the Canadian Foundation for Legal Research.
The Law, Disability & Social Change Project has compiled a database of over 1,200 news stories relating to people with disabilities and COVID-19.
The March 9 workshop “Accessibility, Inclusion, and the Limits of the Law” is the second in the online series “It’s Accessible, but is it Inclusive?”
Windsor Law LLM students in the research methods class are examining the impact of COVID-19 on the university experience.
Last week, federal Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion Carla Qualtrough met virtually with Windsor-Essex advocates for people with disabilities, including the Law, Disability and Social Change Project at Windsor Law.
Led by project director Laverne Jacobs, associate dean of Windsor Law for research and graduate studies, the group had seven students in attendance, including third-year JD/MSW major Deborah Willoughby.
A team from Windsor Law has released an annotated version of the Accessible Canada Act.
The Windsor Law Centre for Cities will use funding from the Research Support Fund for strategic planning.
Windsor Law Associate Dean (Research and Graduate Studies) Laverne Jacobs has been invited to participate in a collaborative, multi-university law course this fall that will bring together professors from around the world over a period of several weeks for their expert instruction.