Associate Dean (Research and Graduate Studies) Laverne Jacobs was one of a number of administrative law scholars invited to share an opinion on the Supreme Court of Canada's pending decision on the standard of review. The decision is scheduled to be released on Thursday, December 19.
Read the full article on the Globe and Mail.
— Published on Dec 18th, 2019
— Published on Dec 10th, 2019
With a local class-action lawsuit in the news following the Westcourt Place fire, Professor Jasminka Kalajdzic sits down with Windsor Morning's Tony Doucette to discuss her new Class Action Clinic at Windsor Law.
— Published on Nov 21st, 2019
In a recent Canadian Bar Association National Magazine article, Windsor Law Professor and National Self-Represented Litigants Project Director Julie Macfarlane disputes that Canadians don't care about legal aid. According to the article, Dr. Macfarlane says the real problem is a lack of stakeholder culture in the legal system.
— Published on Nov 19th, 2019
About 30 Windsor Law students under the leadership of professors Anneke Smit and Patrícia Galvão Ferreira participated in a nationwide research-a-thon on municipalities and climate change Monday, Nov. 18.
— Published on Nov 21st, 2019
From left to right: professors Shanthi Senthe, Muharem Kianieff, Jasminka Kalajdzic, Pascale Chapdelaine
This fall, Windsor Law faculty members were busy organizing significant conferences across the University of Windsor campus and community.
— Published on Nov 12th, 2019
— Published on Mar 25th, 2020
From left to right: Windsor Law Dean Christopher Waters, Professor Valarie Waboose, Research Assistant Lyann Ordenes, Indigenous Legal Studies Coordinator Michelle Nahdee, Research Assistant Meghan Chant, Professor Beverly Jacobs, and Chief Miskokomon (Walpole Island First Nation)
— Published on May 11th, 2021
Windsor Law professor Myra Tawfik was named Tech Researcher of the Year at an awards reception Oct. 26, organized by the WEtech Alliance.
Professor Tawfik, has led a number of projects designed to provide start-ups and innovators with access to legal services to protect their inventions.
— Published on Oct 31st, 2019
Two Windsor Law students are working on rallying the city's Muslim population to vote in the upcoming federal election later this month.
Third-year law student Aadil Nathani and second-year law student Mariam Rajabali are part of the Canadian-Muslim Vote non-profit, which bills itself as a "national, non-profit, non-partisan grassroots organization that aims to increase civic engagement of Canadian Muslims through community outreach and education."
— Published on Oct 8th, 2019