Blog
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Webinar: How to File a Submission with the Commission for Environmental Cooperation
This webinar will provide participants with an opportunity to learn the steps involved in filing a submission with the Commission for Environmental Cooperation, to understand changes to the process and to learn more about who can file a submission. The public will benefit from the opportunity to ask questions related to the process.
May 6, 2021 Centre for the Law and the Environment Assistant
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Canada's Toxic Legacy: Pan American Silver and Mining Billionaire Ross Beaty in Latin America
Join us for a virtual forum to hear from frontline communities and organizations in Latin America who have lived or observed the arrogant disregard of peoples’ rights, the lasting environmental disasters, and the forced displacement to make way for mining projects backed by Ross Beaty, Vancouver-based Pan American Silver’s founder and outgoing chairman.
May 6, 2021 Centre for the Law and the Environment Assistant
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May 4, 2021 Centre for the Law and the Environment Assistant
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Canadian Association for Food Law and Policy 5th Annual Conference: "Governing Territorial Food Systems: Legal Obstacles and Opportunities"
This conference will examine the legal obstacles and opportunities of building and governing territorial food systems as a means of addressing these concerns, and shaping food system futures to ensure they are not only more sustainable and climate-friendly, but more just, healthful, democratic, vibrant and tailored to the landscapes people inhabit. We will ask: How can law and policy be used to build territorial food systems that balance competing interests (while questioning to the extent to which these interests are or need to be in competition with each other)?
May 4, 2021 Centre for the Law and the Environment Assistant
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Warrior Lawyer Profile: Farhana Yamin
When thinking about international efforts to combat climate change, agreements like the 2015 Paris Agreement often comes to mind. With the primary goal of mitigating and reducing greenhouse gas emissions, the agreement was seen as an important step towards addressing the climate crisis. As trust in these traditional methods has declined, however, direct action has moved to the forefront of the movement. A key contributor to both these types of environmental action is Farhana Yamin – a British international environmental lawyer and social justice advocate.
Apr 8, 2021 Julia Fyfe
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Warrior Lawyer Profile: Terri-Lynn Williams-Davidson
The Cedar stands strong behind her as the guitar and sax drift gently around her. Terri-Lynn Williams-Davidson sings soothingly to those cedars as a sign of respect and gratitude. The song is Cedar Sister, sung in Haida words about what the cedar gives us. She describes the shelter it provides, the lessons it gives, and how it lives in harmony with all beings like the bear and salmon. Beyond being beautiful and artistic, the song has significance in the Canadian legal landscape and specifically for the Haida people and their awakening indigenous law.
Apr 5, 2021 E. Condesa Strain
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Warrior Lawyer Profile: Steven Donziger
For many of us, sheltering-in-place due to the COVID-19 pandemic has felt isolating, restrictive, and frustrating. And while navigating a pandemic is no small feat, as a resident of B.C., I have at least been able to leave my house—to pick up the mail, grocery shop, or take a walk. These simple freedoms are currently denied to Steven Donziger, who has been under house arrest for almost 2 years. Donziger is one of the attorneys for various Ecuadorean Indigenous and farming communities in their epic battle against Chevron.
Apr 4, 2021 Lauren Antoniuk
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Warrior Lawyer Profile: Kaitlyn Mitchell
Many animals spend their entire lives in windowless and dark rooms, subject to horrific abuse and perpetual fear from birth until slaughter. Farmed animals are virtually unprotected in Canadian law, and one of the only ways to help these animals is to document and expose animal abuse on farms. Unfortunately, Ontario and Alberta have recently enacted so-called “ag-gag” laws to deter and criminalize this practice and Manitoba is considering a similar bill. Kaitlyn Mitchell is an animal rights lawyer with Canada’s only animal law advocacy organization. Ag-gag laws are a main focus of her work.
Mar 24, 2021 Kaeleigh Phillips
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Warrior Lawyer Profile: Moana Jackson
Māori are intimately connected to the geographical features of their birthplace. The rivers, mountains, forests and oceans are a person’s ancestors. They are part of one’s whakapapa (genealogy) and so Māori have a responsibility to that place. Moana Jackson is of Ngati Kahungungu and Ngati Porou descent. Hikurangi is his mountain and Waiapu his river. Locating oneself before any karakea (talk) is vital, as it is a sign of respect to one’s ancestors, both human and non-human.
Mar 23, 2021 Meghan Robinson
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Warrior Lawyer Profile: Antonio Oposa Jr.
Award winner, lawyer, activist, teacher and author. These are all words others have used to describe Philippine attorney Antonio (Tony) Oposa Jr. “Certified beach bum” is how he prefers to describe himself. Oposa is one of Asia’s most influential and unconventional, yet humble, environmental “warrior lawyers.” His passion, dedication and creative use of law underlie several momentous cases in the Philippines.
Mar 22, 2021 Veronica Plihal
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Warrior Lawyer Profile: Nemonte Nenquimo
When you ask someone from a Western nation, “what does a leader look like?” they may point to politicians, CEOs or possibly even ground-breaking lawyers. Most would not think of Nemonte Nenquimo, but that must be because they have not heard of her. Nemonte, whose name means “many stars, face the sun”, was born and raised in the territory of her grandfathers: the Yasuni Region of the Amazon Rainforest. Nemonte is a leader of the Waorani Indigenous people of the Amazon rainforest in what is colonially referred to as Ecuador.
Mar 22, 2021 Quinn Johnson
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Warrior Lawyer Profile: Katie Redford
Few law students dream that in the mountain of work we submit for grades some part of it could have any—let alone a major—impact on the real world’s legal landscape. Katie Redford did more than dream. In her final year at the University of Virginia School of Law, she pushed to do an independent study on how an antiquated US law dating back to 1789—the Alien Tort Claims Act—could be used to hold American oil company Unocal accountable for purported human rights abuses in Myanmar.
Mar 18, 2021 Daxton Boeré