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In the fall of 2021, the Faculty of Law’s Common Law Section hosted the 4th Annual Autumn School on the Methodology of Research in Law.
Dr. Boulou Ebanda de B’beri, uOttawa’s Special Advisor on Anti-Racism and Inclusive Excellence, opened the second day of the 4th…
Jurivision is publishing two video podcasts in collaboration with Communitas, a peer-reviewed scientific journal affiliated with the Department of Legal Sciences and the Faculty of Political Science and Law of the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM). These podcasts were produced by SineCoreMedia, in collaboration with UQAM’s Faculty of Political Science and Law, its Department of Legal Sciences (where the journal is housed) and the Distinguished Research Chair in Occupational Health and Safety Law at the Civil Law Section, Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa.
Nearly 45 years ago, the law enacting the James Bay Agreement extinguished the rights of Indigenous Peoples covering a territory of 1,082,000 square kilometres. Certain non-signatory Indigenous Peoples still claim a right to this territory. Law professor Ghislain Otis puts this instance of unilateral extinction to the test of fundamental rights.