OBA Foundation Chief Justice of Ontario Fellowships

As announced on the OBA website:

“Call for Applications for 2016-17

The OBA Foundation is now accepting applications for the two Fellowships for the 2016-17 year.

The details of the Fellowships are contained in the Fellowship Terms 2016-17. The deadline for applications is Monday, July 4, 2016.

As the Fellowship Terms indicate, the Fellowship in Research is open to full-time faculty teaching at a Canadian university or college, and the Fellowship in Studies is open to all OBA members who do not otherwise qualify for the fellowship open to full-time faculty.

Applications are to be submitted by e-mail, in PDF or Word format, simultaneously to Anton Katz at anton@amklaw.ca and Valerie Dallas at vdallas@oba.org.

Yours truly,

Anton M. Katz, Trustee
OBA Foundation”

CALE 2016 Annual Conference – Call for Presentations (Research)

The CALE 2016 Annual Conference will be held October 27-29, 2016 at the University of Alberta.

Anyone interested in presenting on a topic related to research and scholarship about legal ethics and professionalism should contact Alice Woolley (awoolley@ucalgary.ca) and Stephen Pitel (spitel@uwo.ca) before April 30, 2016. Proposals from junior scholars and from those working on legal ethics outside the academy are particularly welcomed.  The eventual format of the presentations will depend on, among other things, the number of proposals accepted, but it is expected that each presenter would have about 15-20 minutes plus time for questions.  There is no need to have a formal paper accompanying your presentation: slides or oral remarks alone are fine.  You need not have a finished product: work in progress is welcome.



Federation of Law Societies commits to effective response to TRC report

As announced on the Federation of Law Societies of Canada’s website:

“The Federation of Law Societies of Canada has committed to respond to the Calls to Action published in the 2015 report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in a manner that respectfully engages representatives of Canada’s Indigenous peoples and promotes reconciliation.

In its 2015 final report, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission included Call to Action 27, which called on the Federation of Law Societies of Canada “to ensure that lawyers receive appropriate cultural competency training, which includes the history and legacy of residential schools, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Treaties and Aboriginal rights, Indigenous law, and Aboriginal-Crown relations.”

“This is the next step in the Federation’s response to the Calls to Action in the report” says Federation President Jeff Hirsch. “The first step was the program at the Federation’s annual conference last October. The conference brought together representatives of law societies, Indigenous leaders, academics and other key stakeholders to begin the national dialogue on how the Federation and Canada’s law societies could respond appropriately to promote reconciliation.”  There was consensus among the conference participants that responding to the Calls to Action must be meaningful and prompt, and include direct collaboration with Indigenous peoples from the outset.

On March 11, 2016, the Council of the Federation voted to establish a working group to develop recommendations on how best to effectively respond to the Calls to Action. The Council resolution included a commitment to a process that engages representatives of Indigenous peoples.

“In providing a national response, we will ensure it complements the ongoing work of law societies across the country ” Jeff Hirsch added.”