Law Graduate Student Presentations

The Graduate Program at the Faculty of Law has released the schedule of graduate research presentations. These presentations will be made in room 292 in the law library, and are open to faculty and anyone else who wishes to attend. 50 minutes are allocated for each presentation.

1: 30 Wednesday, March 16th

  • A Reconciliation without Recollection: An Investigation of the Foundations of Aboriginal Law—Josh Nichols
  • Brain Tanning and Shut-eye Dancing: Understanding Plains Cree Ceremony as Legal Pedagogy—Darcy Lindberg
  • Provisional Measures in International Arbitration and Criminal Proceedings: Public Authority and Privatized Justice—Dmytro Galagan

9:00 Friday, March 18th

  • Improving Community Corrections in China: A Comparative Analysis—Qi Kong
  • Hydropower Dams Through the Lens of Environmental Justice—Rebeca Macias Gimenez
  • Gendered consumption: intersections between C0nsumers and women’s rights movements—Tamara Gonçalves
  • Sovereignty, Terra Nullius, Crown Lands, and Indian Reserves: The Dispossession of Indigenous Lands in Canada’s Maritime Provinces—Rob Hamilton

9: 30 Friday, April 1st

  • Utopian Performatives, Embodied Genealogies & Histories of Migration—Preeti Dhaliwal
  • Sovereign Legitimacy and Aboriginal Title: The Supreme Court’s Shift to a Procedural Legitimation of Crown Sovereignty—Ryan Beaton
  • Arbitral Paganism and Legal Disorder: New Sovereign Safeguards in International Investment  Agreements—Hassan Kamalinejad