McGill University Faculty of Law
Faculté de droit de l'université McGill (French) | |
Type | Faculty (law school) |
---|---|
Established | 1848[1] |
Parent institution | McGill University |
Dean | Robert Leckey |
Academic staff | 109[2] |
Students | 875[3] |
Location | , Quebec , Canada |
Campus | Urban |
Languages |
|
Website | mcgill |
The Faculty of Law is one of the professional graduate schools of McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is the oldest law school in Canada. 180 candidates are admitted for any given academic year. For the year 2021 class, the acceptance rate was 10%.[4][5][6]
Notable alumni include Prime Ministers John Abbott and Sir Wilfrid Laurier, thirteen Justices of the Supreme Court (Including the most recent appointments, Mahmud Jamal and Nicholas Kasirer), as well as Members of Parliament. Marc Miller, a member of the current Cabinet of Canada, is a graduate from the Faculty.
Academics
Bachelor of Civil Law and Juris Doctor program
The McGill Faculty of Law offers a unique combined Bachelor of Civil Law (BCL) and Juris Doctor (JD) program. The BCL/JD program emphasizes a transsystemic and polyjural approach that integrates common law and civil law, sometimes within a single class.[7] More recently, the Faculty has incorporated Indigenous law into its curriculum in response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's recommendations for Canadian law schools.[8]
In 2016, the Faculty reviewed its curriculum and added Integration Week: an introductory week of group work and lectures for first-year students.[9] They also added two Focus Weeks—one in fall and one in winter—that allow students to take intensive one-week courses. In winter 2023, the first student seminar on Abolitionist practices and Transformative Justice was launched.
The duration of BCL/JD program is somewhat flexible: the program can be completed in 3, 3.5, or 4 years. Students who opt for a minor, major, or honours program generally require 4 years to complete their degree. Majors are offered in International Human Rights and Development and in Commercial Negotiation and Dispute Resolution.[10]
The Faculty of Law, in collaboration with the Desautels Faculty of Management and the Faculty of Art's School of Social Work, offers joint programs that combine the BCL/JD program with either a Master of Business Administration (MBA) or a Master of Social Work (MSW).[9] A joint program takes 4 to 5 years to complete.
The Faculty of Law's Admissions Office has an acceptance rate of 10.1%.[11]
Master of Laws (LLM)
The Faculty offers four LLM programs for students: one general LLM program, and three specialized LLM programs in Air and Space Law, Environment, and Bioethics. Except for the LLM Bioethics program, all programs have thesis and non-thesis options.[12] The non-thesis Master's of Law option prioritizes course work and can be completed in twelve months. The thesis option prioritizes research; it can be completed in sixteen to twenty-four months. Student in the LLM Bioethics program write a thesis.[13]
Doctor of Civil Law (DCL)
The Faculty offers three DCL programs in General Law, Comparative Law, and Air and Space Law.[14] Students generally complete the DCL program in 3 to 4 years.
Graduate Certificates
The Faculty offers graduate certificates in Comparative Law and in Air and Space Law. Graduate certificates are awarded upon completing a set number of credits. Certificates are based on coursework, and no thesis is required.
History
The Faculty of Law was officially created in 1853, after a petition signed by young men studying law in Montreal was made to McGill in 1848.[1] With the incoming class of 1969, the Faculty added a stand-alone common law degree, suitable to the practice of law in other Canadian provinces, which could be taken individually or jointly with the traditional Civil Law curriculum. The joint degree was then referred to as the National Programme, and taught common law and civil law in separate courses, but combined their study in a year-long introductory "Foundations" course and in some upper-year seminars.[15] In 1951, McGill inaugurated its first post-graduate law program with the creation of its Institute of Air & Space Law.[16] The institute was founded by John Cobb Cooper, who had served as a senior official in Pan American World Airways, and the International Air Transport Association.[17] Canada's only United Nations organ, the International Civil Aviation Organization, is also headquartered in Montreal.[18][circular reference]
With the incoming class of 1999, the Faculty eliminated its civil, common, and national programs, and replaced them with a single program, which includes some mandatory first-year courses and some upper-year courses which integrate both common and civil law. This joint and bilingual degree, which all students must take, is now referred to as the transsystemic program.[19] This program underwent slight revisions during a curriculum renewal unrolled in 2016. Under the newly revised program, criminal and property law are taught differently; incoming students also undergo two "integration weeks" (one in the fall and winter).[20]
The Transsystemic program was created under the direction of former Dean Stephen Toope, whereby every student graduates with degrees in both civil law and common law. This means that, from the first year, courses now explore civil and common law concepts in close comparison. Students analyse and critically evaluate the two traditions, their histories, and their social, political, and cultural contexts.[21] Undergraduate students may participate in international exchange programs, and in the International Courts and Tribunals Program, which in 2006 received a Scotiabank-AUCC Award for Excellence in Internationalization.[22]
Since 1976, the Faculty of Law's Institute of Air and Space Law, has annually published the first and only bilingual journal in the field of air and space law, the Annals of Air and Space Law.[23] Other Faculty of Law bilingual publications include the McGill Law Journal and the McGill Journal of Sustainable Development Law.[24]
The Buildings
Old Chancellor Day Hall and New Chancellor Day Hall are the names of two joined buildings at McGill University's downtown campus that house the Faculty of Law. Old Chancellor Day Hall was designed by noted architect Bruce Price for businessman James Ross. New Chancellor Day Hall was completed in 1967 by architecture firm Bland, Lemoyne, Edwards, and Shine. The Old and New Chancellor Day buildings are connected by an underground passage and by an atrium, which also connects to the Nahum Gelber Law Library. Today, Old Chancellor Day Hall is used for administrative and faculty offices. New Chancellor Day Hall includes all classrooms, a moot court room, student spaces, law student services, and administrative and faculty offices.
Old Chancellor Day Hall
In 1892, Canadian civil engineer, businessman, and philanthropist James Ross hired architect Bruce Price (whose other masterworks included Windsor Station and Château Frontenac) to design a château-style mansion in Montreal's Golden Square Mile, on Peel Street.[25] Built largely of yellow sandstone from New Brunswick, the James Ross House was one of the most expensive private homes built in Canada during the nineteenth century. The house was a social centre for the Golden Square Mile.[25]
His son John Kenneth Leveson Ross, a noted bon vivant and sportsman, inherited both the house and the Ross fortune.[26] In the 1919, J.K.L. Ross hired architects Trowbridge and Livingstone to undertake $600,000 of renovations that affected every room in the house.[26] The renovation included adding a private bathroom to each bedroom, covering up a skylight, and putting in windows to create a library/reading room in what is now the Common Room.[27] John Ross declared bankruptcy in 1928, and the James Ross House was sold at auction in 1929 for a mere $51,000. The mansion was subsequently purchased by J.W. McConnell in 1948 as a gift to McGill University.[28]
While the university may have initially planned to use it for a student residence, the Faculty of Law officially moved into the mansion in a ceremony attended by many members of the judiciary and the Montreal Bar on 9 February 1950. At the ceremony, McGill's Chancellor, Orville S. Tyndale, declared on behalf of the Board of Governors that the mansion would be named Chancellor Day Hall in honour of McGill's first Chancellor, Charles Dewey Day. The opening ceremony was held in the students' handsomely furnished common room, a gift from Maurice Pollack.[29]
On 9 July 2014, Old Chancellor Day Hall closed for 14 months for renovations to upgrade the building's heating, electrical systems, plumbing, windows, and more. Thirty-four staff and faculty members were relocated to New Chancellor Day Hall and to temporary offices on McGill College Avenue.[30][27]
In December 2017, representatives of the Clan Ross Association of Canada and members of the Faculty of Law unveiled a plaque commemorating James Ross. The plaque is located near the main entrance.[31]
New Chancellor Day Hall
New Chancellor Day Hall was built in 1967 to address the Faculty of Law's growing program and increased enrolment.[32] A six-storey precast concrete tower designed by architectural firm Bland, Lemoyne, Edwards, and Shine was erected just west of Chancellor Day Hall and connected to it by a corridor, at the cost of $1.825 million.[32] This extension was named New Chancellor Day Hall and blended with the adjacent Stewart Biological Sciences Building. New Chancellor Day Hall included additional classrooms, study spaces, and a moot court. Prior to the construction of the Gelber Law Library, the top floors of New Chancellor Day Hall housed the library.[26][33]
The building was inaugurated on 21 January 1967. During the bilingual ceremony, the Faculty of Law awarded seven honorary degrees, including degrees to Chief Justice Robert Taschereau of Canada, Chief Justice Earl Warren of the United States, and Lord Denning of Great Britain.[33] Following the inauguration of the Gelber Law Library in 1998, the empty floors of New Chancellor Day that had previously been used as the library were used by McGill University to house various small research units attached to different faculties.[34] In 2005, all student services at the Faculty of Law were consolidated on the fourth floor of New Chancellor Day Hall.
From 2008 to 2009, New Chancellor Day Hall underwent major renovations. The project overhauled the third, fifth, and sixth floors. New architectural features included adding a massive skylight above a staircase between the fifth and sixth floors, piercing windows on the sixth floor, and creating partially frosted glass partitions between offices to allow natural light inside interior offices. The third floor is devoted to student spaces – accommodating a multimedia classroom with movable walls and a seminar room. The third floor is also home to multiple student clubs, student-run law journals, and the graduate students' lounge. The fifth and sixth floors feature a conference room, and house some of the Faculty's research units, as well as offices for professors, staff, graduate students, and visiting scholars.[34]
Nahum Gelber Law Library
The Nahum Gelber Law Library is one of the 13 branches of the McGill University Library and houses over 220,000 volumes of statutes, regulations, law reports, treatises, books, journals and other legal material. Designed by Dan Hanganu, the Nahum Gelber Law Library was inaugurated September 1998.[26] The building was designed to link to New and Old Chancellor Day Halls via a two-level atrium for socializing and studying.[35]
The Gelber Library is home to the Wainwright Collection, which was established in 1958 with the acquisition of several hundred volumes dedicated to the history of French law.[36] The collection is primarily composed of early French jurists on general civil law before the Codification of 1804 and was the personal library of French legal historian François Olivier-Martin.[37] Over the years, the Wainwright fund has allowed the Library to expand the collection beyond the classic vision of civil law, centred on France, to reflect the global influence of civil law across languages and continents. Today, the collection consists of 800 works comprising 1200 volumes and is conserved in controlled atmospheric conditions in the Peter M. Laing Room, located on the second floor of the Gelber Law Library.[38]
Reputation
University rankings | |
---|---|
World rankings | |
QS World[39] | 22 |
THE World[40] | 17 |
Canadian rankings |
Graduates of the Faculty consistently account for one quarter of Canada's Supreme Court clerkships,[41][42][43][44] more than any law school in Canada.[45] One of the small number of elite law schools internationally that may submit International Court of Justice (ICJ) clerkship applications, it also consistently places graduates at the ICJ,[46][47] and has a better placement record than any other Canadian law school.
Its flagship law review, the McGill Law Journal, is the most cited law faculty review by Canada's Supreme Court, and was ranked the best overall student-run law journal in the world outside of the United States. It also publishes the Canadian Guide to Uniform Legal Citation, the standard reference work for almost all Canadian law reviews, Canadian law schools, and courts.
The McGill University Faculty of Law has consistently placed as the top ranking law school in Canada and has the highest acceptance requirements. The alumni from McGill University's law school consist of a diverse group of distinguished leaders on a global scale. It has historically placed in the top ~20 law schools globally on multiple ranking systems.[48] It was recently ranked the 22nd best law school worldwide in the 2019 QS World Ranking.[48] It was ranked the 16th best law school in the world in the 2021 Times Higher Education World Rankings, marking consistent showings for McGill in the top 20 worldwide in the ranking.[49] For the 2023 ranking, the Times Higher Education ranked the Faculty the 17th best law school in the world.[50]
In 2023, the McGill University Faculty of Law had a 97.3% bar pass rate, the best rate in Quebec. [51]
Controversies
In 2018, the Faculty, along with the McGill Office for Students with Disabilities, were sued by a blind law student who alleged that he was systematically denied access to accommodation measures. His lawsuit was covered by local and national media outlets.[52][53][54]
After dissatisfaction with McGill University's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and a continued pattern of overriding or limited Faculty decision-making, the full-time professors at the Faculty of Law formed the Association of McGill Professors of Law (AMPL) and filed for certification with Quebec's Tribunal administratif du travail on November 7, 2021. [55] McGill disputed the right of the union to be certified but lost before the Tribunal on November 8, 2022.[56] McGill disputed the right of the union to be certified but lost before the Tribunal on November 8, 2022.[57] The parties immediately commenced negotiations over a collective agreement. Because McGill University failed to negotiate in good faith, AMPL members conducted a one day strike on February 13, 2024 to advance negotiations.[58] The University continued to delay negotiations and failed to advance counterproposals forcing AMPL to call an unlimited strike, which began on April 24, 2024.[59]
Soon after the strike began, McGill University's Provost and Executive Vice-President, Christopher Manfredi, in a private email to McGill's President and Vice-Chancellor, Deep Saini and Law Dean, Robert Leckey, on which he inadvertently included a law student and journalist, questioned the ability of McGill law students to read, concluding “I’m a bit worried about the people we’re sending into the legal profession.” [60] Manfredi was concerned that McGill Law Students were strongly siding with AMPL during the strike. While Manfredi apologized to students, neither Saini nor Leckey distanced themselves from Manfredi's original comments.
After failing to negotiate with the union for over five weeks, McGill announced it would hold graduation ceremonies for students normally completing their studies in Winter 2024 even though those students had no grades and their graduation status had not been conferred in accordance with University regulations.[61] The provincial law societies are allowing students to write their bar exams but those students will not be eligible to become lawyers until McGill submits final grades, something it cannot do while its professors are on strike.
The Faculty is home to the first faculty union at McGill, the Association of McGill Law Professors. Starting on April 24, 2024, all full-time faculty began an unlimited strike due to McGill University's failure to bargain in good faith.[62] McGill's perceived poor treatment of the union led academics and most of their associations across Canada to move their activities off of the McGill campus - which played host - during one of the largest academic events of the year, the Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences in June 2024. Said one academic who held meetings away from McGill: "[T]he senior administrators have, in my opinion, treated this union so poorly that it is incumbent on the rest of the Canadian academy to support" the union.[63]
Notable people
Current faculty chair-holders and emeritus professors
- Andrea Bjorklund, holder of the L. Yves Fortier Chair in International Arbitration and International Commercial Law.[64]
- Adelle Blackett, holder of the Canada Research Chair in Transnational Labour Law and Development,[65] former member of the International Labour Organization.
- Allison Christians, holder of the H. Heward Stikeman Chair in Tax Law.
- Ignacio Cofone, holder of the Canada Research Chair in Artificial Intelligence Law and Data Governance.[66]
- François Crépeau, former director of the Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism, holder of the Hans and Tamar Oppenheimer Chair in Public International Law, and former United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants.
- Helge Dedek, holder of the Arnold Wainwright Chair in Civil Law.
- Yaëll Emerich, holder of the Canada Research Chair in Transsystemic Property and Sustainable Communities.[67]
- Evan Fox-Decent, Canada Research Chair in Cosmopolitan Law and Justice[68][69] and President, Association of McGill Professors of Law.[70]
- Fabien Gélinas, holder of the Sir William C. Macdonald Chair.[71]
- E. Richard Gold, holder of a James McGill Professorship, Director of the Centre for Intellectual Property,[72] and Strategic Lead, Policy and Training at Conscience.[73]
- Sébastien Jodoin, holder of the Canada Research Chair in Human Rights, Health and the Environment.[74]
- Robert Leckey, dean and holder of the Samuel Gale Chair.
- Marie Manikis, holder of a William Dawson Chair.[75]
- Frédéric Mégret, holder of the Hans & Tamar Oppenheimer Chair in Public International Law.[76]
- Aaron Mills, holder of the Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Constitutionalism and Philosophy.[77]
- Johanne Poirier, holder of the Peter MacKell Chair in Federalism.[78]
- René Provost, holder of a James McGill Professorship.[79]
- Stephen Allan Scott, professor emeritus and leading scholar on the Canadian Constitution.
- Colleen Sheppard, holder of the FR Scott Chair in Public & Constitutional Law.[80]
- Daniel Weinstock, holder of the Katharine A. Pearson Chair in Civil Society and Public Policy.
- Peer Zumbansen, Business law professor, co-founder of the German Law Journal
Past faculty members
- Payam Akhavan, former UN prosecutor at The Hague.
- F.H. Buckley (LLB 1974), Foundation Professor at George Mason University School of Law
- Irwin Cotler (BCL 1961, LLD 2019), human rights lawyer, former MP for Mount Royal and former Canadian Minister of Justice
- Julius Grey (BCL 1971), Quebec human rights lawyer
- Ralph Simmonds Justice of the Supreme Court of Western Australia
- Joseph Cohen, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec for Montréal–Saint-Laurent
- John Cobb Cooper (LLD 1952), founded the Institute of Air & Space Law at McGill University in 1951
- Paul-André Crépeau, responsible for drafting the new Civil Code of Quebec
- Armand de Mestral, Jean Monnet Chair in the Law of International Economic Integration.
- Herbert Marx, Canadian lawyer, university law professor, politician, and judge
- James Mallory – for many years Canada's leading constitutional scholar
- Christophe-Alphonse Geoffrion, Canadian lawyer, professor, and Canadian cabinet member
- Charles Joseph Doherty (BCL 1876, Hon. LLD 1913) – Minister of Justice and Attorney General, 1911–1921
- H. Patrick Glenn, comparative legal scholar and author of "Legal Traditions of the World".
- Patrick Healy (BCL 1981), judge at the Quebec Court of Appeal.
- John Peters Humphrey (BCL 1929, LLB 1976), founding Director of the United Nations Human Rights division and principal drafter of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- Daniel Jutras, former Dean of McGill Law and current Recteur of Université de Montréal
- Marianne Scott, first woman to be appointed as National Librarian of Canada
- David Johnston (LLD 2000), fourteenth Principal and Vice-Chancellor of McGill University, and former Governor General of Canada
- Pierre-Marc Johnson, Canadian lawyer, physician, 24th premier of Quebec
- Nicholas Kasirer (BCL 1985, LLB 1985), scholar of civil law, comparative law, and law and language, Dean of the faculty 2004–2009, Supreme Court of Canada judge
- Donald James Johnston (BCL 1958, LLD 2003), 4th Secretary General of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and Attorney General of Canada from 1984 to 1988.
- David Lametti (BCL 1989, LLB 1989), MP for LaSalle—Émard—Verdun, Canadian Minister of Justice, and former Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of International Trade
- Richard Lehun (BCL/LLB 2005, DCL 2007) German-Canadian inter-disciplinary visual artist, professor of fiduciary law and justice theory
- W. C. J. Meredith, special federal prosecutor at the trial of Fred Rose, for whom the Meredith Memorial Lectures are named
- Roderick A. Macdonald, Dean of the faculty (1984-1989) influential law reformer, scholar, teacher, mentor and Founding President of the Law Commission of Canada[81]
- Yves-Marie Morissette, civil and comparative law scholar, Quebec Court of Appeal judge.
- Stephen A. Smith, scholar of contractual and remedial law.
- Margaret Somerville, ethicist and former Samuel Gale Professor of Law.
- William Tetley, maritime law scholar, Quebec MNA for Notre-Dame-de-Grâce and Cabinet Minister.
- Michael Trebilcock legal scholar in economics
- Stephen Toope (BCL 1983, LLB 1983, LLD 2017), international law scholar, vice-chancellor of Cambridge University and former President of the University of British Columbia.
- Orville Sievwright Tyndale, Canadian judge and Chancellor of McGill University
- Robert Stanley Weir (BCL 1880, DCL 1897), Quebec judge, considered one of the leading experts of the day on Quebec's municipal civil law
Alumni
Justices of the Supreme Court of Canada
- Douglas Abbott (BCL 1918), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 1954, previously Minister of National Defence and Minister of Finance[82]
- Louis-Philippe de Grandpré (BCL 1938), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 1974, formerly president of the Canadian Bar Association[83]
- Marie Deschamps (LLM 1983), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 2002, previously a Judge on the Quebec Court of Appeal[84]
- Morris Fish (BCL 1962), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 2003, previously a Judge on the Quebec Court of Appeal[85]
- Clément Gascon (BCL 1981), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 2014, previously a Judge on the Quebec Court of Appeal[86]
- Désiré Girouard (BCL 1860), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 1895, previously member of Parliament[87]
- Charles D. Gonthier (BCL 1951), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 1989, previously a Judge on the Quebec Court of Appeal[88]
- Mahmud Jamal (BCL’93, LLB’93), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 2021, previously a Judge on the Court of Appeal for Ontario[89]
- Nicholas Kasirer (BCL 1985, LLB 1985), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 2019, previously a Judge on the Quebec Court of Appeal[90]
- Gerald Le Dain (BCL 1949), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 1984, previously a Judge on the Federal Court of Appeal[91]
- Sheilah L. Martin (BCL 1981, LLB 1981), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 2017, previously judge of the Court of Appeal of Alberta[92]
- Pierre-Basile Mignault (BCL 1878), puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 1918, previously President of the Bar of Montreal[93]
- Thibaudeau Rinfret (BCL 1900), Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada – appointed to the Court in 1924, previously a Judge on the Superior Court of Quebec[94]
Jurists and legal professionals
- Jean-Louis Baudouin (BCL 1958, LLD 2007)
- Akintola Olufemi Eyiwunmi (LLM 1964), justice for the Supreme Court of Nigeria
- Morag Wise, Lady Wise (LLM 1994) - Senator of the College of Justice, a judge of Scotland's Supreme Court.
- Harry Batshaw (BCL 1924), justice for the Quebec Superior Court
- Robert Black (LLM 1970), Professor Emeritus of Scots Law at the University of Edinburgh
- Alanna Devine (BCL/LLB 2006), former director of Animal Advocacy at the Montreal branch of the Canadian Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
- John Gomery (BCL 1956), former judge of the Quebec Superior Court.
- Benjamin J. Greenberg (BA’54, BCL’57), judge for the Quebec Superior Court
- R. A. E. Greenshields (BCL 1885), Chief Justice of the Superior Court of Quebec; Dean of the McGill University Faculty of Law, and 9th Chancellor of Bishop's University
- Julius Grey (BCL 1971), Quebec human rights lawyer
- Michelle Hanlon (LLM 2017), founder and president of For All Moonkind, president of the National Space Society, co-director of the Center for Air and Space Law at the University of Mississippi School of Law
- Chile Eboe-Osuji (LLM 1991), Nigerian judge of the International Criminal Court, The Hague and former President of the International Criminal Court
- Alison Harvison-Young (BCL 1983, LLB 1983), family law expert and judge of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, former Dean of Queen's University Faculty of Law
- James K. Hugessen (BCL 1957) judge currently serving on the Federal Court of Canada
- Mahmud Jamal (BCL/LLB 1993), former judge on the Court of Appeal for Ontario; now a judge of the Supreme Court of Canada
- Glenn Joyal (BCL 1986), Chief Justice of the Court of Queen's Bench of Manitoba
- Richard Lehun (BCL/LLB 2005, DCL 2007) German-Canadian inter-disciplinary visual artist, professor of fiduciary law and justice theory
- Allan Lutfy (BCL 1968) Justice and former Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Canada
- Edward Stuart McDougall, judge on the International Military Tribunal for the Far East
- Mayo Moran (LLB 1990), Professor of Law, Provost and Vice-Chancellor of Trinity College, Toronto
- Siobhán Phelan (LLM 1994), judge of the High Court of Ireland
- Geneviève Saumier (BCL 1991, LLB 1991), former professor at McGill Law, current Dean at Université de Montréal Faculty of Law
- Brian Slattery (BCL 1968), Professor Emeritus of Law at Osgoode Hall Law School, prominent academic in Canadian Constitutional Law and Aboriginal rights discourse
- George Springate, former CFL player for the Grey-cup winning Montreal Alouettes, politician, and Citizenship Judge
- Max M. Teitelbaum (BCL 1957), puisne justice of the Federal Court of Canada.[95]
- Rıza Türmen (LLM 1980) – former judge of the European Court of Human Rights, former Member of the Turkish Parliament and Turkish Ambassador to Switzerland
- Richard Warman (LLM 2004), renowned Canadian human rights lawyer
- Jeremy Webber (BCL/LLB 1984), Professor Emeritus, University of Victoria Dean of Law 2013-2018
- Ashfaq Khalfan (BCL/LLB 2002), international jurist in human rights law, Director of the Law and Policy Programme at Amnesty International, and Chair of the Board of Governors of the Centre for International Sustainable Development Law
Political figures
- John Abbott (BCL 1854),[96] 3rd Prime Minister of Canada.
- Doris Akol (LLM 2001) – Former Commissioner General Uganda Revenue Authority
- Warren Allmand (BCL 1952) – served variously as Solicitor General, Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, and Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs between 1972 and 1979.
- Will Amos (BCL/LLB 2004), Liberal politician, MP for the riding of Pontiac.
- W. David Angus (BCL 1962), former Canadian senator
- Laetitia Avia (LLM 2013), French lawyer and politician of La République En Marche! (LREM) who served as the member of the National Assembly for the 8th constituency of Paris from 2017 to 2022
- Rachel Bendayan (BA’02, BCL/LLB’06) – Member of Parliament for Outremont
- Peng Ming-min (LLM 1953) – prominent Taiwanese democracy and independence activist
- Albert Joseph Brown (BCL 1886) – Senator for Wellington, 1932–1938
- Barry Campbell (BCL 1971) – lawyer, lobbyist and former politician
- Leo Kolber (BCL 1952) – Canadian businessman, philanthropist and Senator, serving from 1983 to 2004
- Jérôme Choquette (BCL 1946) – prominent lawyer and Quebec politician
- Michal Cotler-Wunsh (LLM 2006) – Israeli politician, member of the Knesset for the Blue and White alliance
- George Washington Stephens (BCL 1863) – Canadian businessman, lawyer, and politician
- Maurice Alexander (BA 1908; BCL 1910) – Liberal Member of the House of Commons in the British Parliament for Southwark South East, UK
- Brooke Claxton (BCL 1946) – Minister of Health, 1943–1946; Minister of National Defence, 1946–1954.
- John Joseph Curran (LLB 1862) – first Solicitor General of Canada.
- Henry Joseph Cloran (BCL 1883) – Senator for Victoria, Quebec, 1903–1928
- Samuel William Jacobs (BCL 1893) – Canadian lawyer, Member of Parliament and a leader of the Canadian Jewish community
- Thomas D'Arcy McGee (BCL 1861),[97] Member of Parliament, Minister of agriculture, immigration and statistics, and Father of Canadian Confederation.
- Charles Dewey Day Chancellor of McGill University 1864–1884, political figure in Canada East.
- Charles Drury (BCL 1936) – Minister of Finance, Defence, Public Works, Industry, President of the Treasury Board
- Ken Dryden (LLB 1973), cabinet minister, MP for York Centre, and Hockey Hall of Fame member, six-time Stanley Cup Winner
- Brian Gallant (LLM 2011), former Premier of New Brunswick.
- Yoine Goldstein (BCL 1958), former Canadian senator.
- Harry Blank (BCL 1950) – Attorney, Liberal politician, and seven-term member of the National Assembly of Quebec
- Stanley Hartt (BCL 1963), lawyer, businessman and chief of staff to Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney
- Arnold Heeney (BCL 1927) – ambassador to the United States and NATO.
- Christopher Benfield Carter (BCL 1866) – Quebec lawyer and politician
- George Carlyle Marler (BCL 1922) – Quebec politician, notary and philatelist
- Véronique Hivon (BCL 1994, LLB 1994), member of the National Assembly of Quebec for Joliette.
- Balarama Holness (JD/BCL 2021), rights activist, former Canadian Football League (CFL) player, candidate for mayor in the 2021 Montreal municipal elections[98]
- Anthony Housefather (BCL 1993, LLB 1993), Liberal politician, MP for the riding of Mount Royal.
- John Peters Humphrey (BCom’25, BA’27, BCL’29, PhD’45, LLD’76), first director of the UN's Human Rights Division, principal author of the first draft of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
- George Gordon Hyde (BCL 1908), prominent lawyer and Member of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec for Westmount–Saint-Georges
- Samuel William Jacobs (BCL 1893) – Member of Parliament for George-Étienne Cartier, Quebec.
- Kurt Jaeger (LLM 1989) – current Ambassador of Liechtenstein to the United States
- Marie-Claire Kirkland-Casgrain (BCL’50, LLD’97), first woman to become a member of the National Assembly of Quebec, lawyer and judge.
- Adrian Knatchbull-Hugessen (BCL 1914), Canadian lawyer and senator
- Rodolphe Laflamme (BCL 1856, DCL 1873), 5th Attorney General of Canada
- Michael Pitfield (BCL 1958), former Canadian Senator and senior civil servant
- David Lametti (BCL 1989, LLB 1989), Liberal politician, MP for the riding of LaSalle—Émard—Verdun, Canadian Minister of Justice, and former Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of International Trade.
- Sir Wilfrid Laurier (BCL 1866),[99] 7th Prime Minister of Canada.
- Joël Lightbound (BCL/LLB 2011), Liberal politician, MP for the riding of Louis-Hébert.
- Hillel Neuer (BCL 1997, LLB 1997), international lawyer, writer, and executive director of UN Watch.
- Peter Samuel George Mackenzie (BCL 1883) – Liberal Member of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec for Richmond
- Alan Macnaughton (BCL 1927) – former Member of Parliament and Speaker of the House of Commons.
- Joni Madraiwiwi (LLM 1989) – former acting president and vice-president of the Republic of Fiji and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Republic of Nauru
- Marcel Massé (BCL 1961) – Canadian politician, civil servant and Rhodes Scholar
- Catherine McKenna (LLB 1999), Liberal politician, MP for the riding of Ottawa Centre, and Minister of Infrastructure and Communities.
- Marc Miller (BCL/LLB 2001) Lawyer and MP for the Liberal current Canadian Minister of Indigenous Services.
- Walter George Mitchell (BCL 1901) Member of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec for Richmond
- Elizabeth Monk (BCL 1923) Canadian lawyer and Montreal city councillor, one of the first two women admitted to the Quebec Bar
- Frederick Debartzch Monk (BCL 1877) – Minister of Public Works, 1911–1912
- Thomas Mulcair (BCL 1976, LLB 1977), former leader of the NDP of the Official Opposition, MP for Outremont, former Quebec MNA for Chomedy and Minister of Environment.
- Joe Oliver (BCL 1964), former MP for Eglinton—Lawrence, Minister of Finance and Minister of Natural Resources.
- Narcisse Pérodeau (BCL 1876), a Quebec politician and the 14th Lieutenant Governor of Quebec.
- Jim Peterson (DCL 1970) – Minister of International Trade, 2003–2006.
- Sydney David Pierce (BCL 1925, LLD 1956) – Olympic hurdler and ambassador to Brazil, Belgium, Luxembourg, Mexico, and the OECD.
- Lazarus Phillips (BCL 1918), Canadian lawyer and Senator.
- John Rankin (LLM 1984) – current Governor-General of Bermuda
- Greg Rickford (BCL/LLB 2005) – Minister of Natural Resources, 2014–2015.
- Alexander Cameron Rutherford (BCL 1881), first premier of Alberta, founder of the University of Alberta.
- Larry W. Smith (BCL 1976), former Canadian senator, nine season running back for Montreal Alouettes and 8th commissioner of the CFL.
- Francis R. Scott (BCL 1927, LLD 1967), constitutional rights lawyer, civil libertarian, poet, founder of the first social democratic party and the NDP
- Kathleen Weil (BCL 1982, LLB 1982), member of the National Assembly of Quebec for Notre-Dame-de-Grâce.
- William Alexander Weir (BCL 1881), Quebec judge and politician
- Nick Whalen (LLB 2011), Lawyer and former MP for the Liberal Party
Other alumni
- Ian DeVere Archer (LLM 1968) – Secretary of Health and Social Security of Barbados and former chairman of Caribbean Airlines (national airline of Barbados)
- Isidore Gordon Ascher (BCL 1862), Scottish-Canadian novelist and poet
- Marc Barbeau (BCL’84, LLB’84), Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer of Air Canada
- David Berger (BCL 1975), former President of the Canadian Football League and member of parliament
- Strachan Bethune, twice Bâtonnier of Montreal and the 1st Anglican Chancellor of the Diocese of Montreal
- David P. O'Brien (BCL 1965), businessman, currently as chairman of Royal Bank of Canada
- David W. Binet (LLB 1985), Deputy Chairman, Thomson Reuters; President and Chief Executive Officer, The Woodbridge Company
- Peter Blaikie (BCL 1965), Quebec lawyer, politician, co-founder of Heenan Blaikie
- Mark Boidman, prominent media and tech investment banker and attorney, specializing in mergers and acquisitions
- Walker Boone, actor, best known as the voice of the Nintendo character Mario
- Michael Byers (BCL, LLB 1992), Canadian legal scholar and non-fiction author
- Lionel Chetwynd (BCL 1967), British-American screenwriter, director and producer
- Eleanor Clitheroe (LLM 1978), former president and CEO of Hydro One
- David Cohen (BCL 1972), prominent immigration lawyer
- Leonard Cohen, singer-songwriter (who only did a year of Law before dropping out)
- Chuck Comeau, drummer for Simple Plan (studied law but ultimately dropped out)
- James Creighton (BCL 1880) "father of organized hockey"
- Mary Dawson (BCL 1963), civil servant, former Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner of Canada.
- James de Beaujeu Domville (BCL 1957) theatrical producer and administrator, former commissioner of National Film Board of Canada (NFB)
- Dennis Draper (dropped out before completing his studies), Brigadier-General, Chief Constable of the Toronto Police Department from 1928 to 1946
- Yves Fortier (BCL 1958, LLD 2005), Canadian Ambassador to the United Nations and President of the United Nations Security Council.
- George Buchanan Foster (BCL 1921), First World War flying ace and prominent attorney.
- Michael Goldbloom (BCL 1978, LLB 1979), Principal and Vice-Chancellor of Bishop's University in Lennoxville, Quebec; former publisher of the Toronto Star
- Jonathan Ross Goodman (JD/LLB, MBA 1994) Founder, Executive Chairman Knight Therapeutics and founder of Paladin Labs Inc.
- Shaul Gordon (BCL/JD 2019, LLM 2021), Canadian-Israeli award-winning fencer, Olympic athlete (Tokyo 2020)
- Charles Goren (BCL 1922), American bridge player and best-selling writer
- Anne-France Goldwater (BCL 1980), attorney and television judge personality on "L'Arbitre"
- A. Jean de Grandpré (BCL 1943), first chairman and CEO of BCE Inc.
- Sébastien Lebel-Grenier (DCL 2002), Principal and Vice- Chancellor Bishop's University
- Roy Heenan (BCL 1960, LLD 2008), Labour lawyer, academic, and co-founder of Heenan Blaikie
- Alex Johnston (BCL/LLB 1999), lawyer, author, and businesswoman, co-chair of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada
- Tasha Kheiriddin (BCL/LLB 1993), conservative television media personality, public policy analyst and commentator
- Hubert Lacroix (BCL 1976), former CEO and President of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
- David Lawee (BCL 1993), tech executive, founder of Google Capital
- Anthony Lemke (BCL/LLB) television and film actor, lawyer and entrepreneur
- Annie MacDonald Langstaff (BCL 1914), the first woman to earn a law degree in Quebec, a legal activist, supporter of women's suffrage and an early woman aviator.
- William Douw Lighthall(BCL 1881), lawyer, historian, novelist, poet and philosopher
- David Ross McCord (BCL 1867) lawyer, philanthropist, founder of the McCord Museum
- Hilmi M. Zawati (LLB 1978, MA 1986, PhD 1994, LLM 1997, DCL 2010), International Criminal Law Jurist, and Chair of Centre for International Accountability and Justice (CIAJ)
- Benjamin Sormonte (BCL 2010, LLB 2010), co-founder of Maman Bakery with over 30 locations
- Don Meehan (LLB 1975), founder of Newport Sports agency, which represents several hockey players in the NHL.
- Mayo Moran (LLB 1990), Dean of University of Toronto Faculty of Law 2006–2014, first female dean.
- Pierre Péladeau (BCL 1950), founder of Canadian media company Quebecor Inc.
- Richard Pound (BCL 1962, LLD 2009), Canadian swimming champion, lawyer and prominent spokesman for ethics in sport.
- Jennifer Stoddart (BCL 1980, LLD 2015), civil servant, sixth Privacy Commissioner of Canada
- Frank Shoofey (BA 1961, BCL 1964), criminal lawyer.
- Timothy Porteous (BA'54, BCL'57), former head of the Canada Council and the Ontario College of Art and Design
- Paulos Tesfagiorgis (LLM), Eritrean human rights activist
- Stephen Toope (BCL 1983, LLB 1983, LLD 2017), international legal scholar, vice-chancellor of Cambridge University and former President of the University of British Columbia.
- Christopher Waters (LLM 1998, DCL 2002), Dean of University of Windsor Faculty of Law 2006–Present
- Robert Stanley Weir (BCL 1880, DCL 1897), Quebec judge and poet most famous for writing the English lyrics to "O Canada", the national anthem of Canada
- Mortimer Zuckerman (BCL 1961), Canadian-American billionaire media magnate, co-founder, executive chairman and former CEO of Boston Properties
Deans of the Faculty
The study of law at McGill began in 1844 when William Badgley was appointed lecturer in law within the Faculty of Arts. While informal classes began earlier, the Faculty of Law was officially established at McGill in 1853, with William Badgley appointed its first dean. Over the years, the following people have served the Faculty of Law as deans.[100][101][102][103][104]
- 1853–1855: William Badgley, DCL 1870
- 1855–1876: John Abbott, BCL 1854, DCL 1867
- 1876–1888: William Hastings Kerr (acting dean, 1876–1881), BCL 1872
- 1888–1896: Norman W. Trenholme, BCL 1865, DCL 1887
- 1896–1897: Leonidas Davidson, BCL 1864
- 1897–1914: Frederick Parker Walton, LLD 1915
- 1914–1915: Sir Charles Peers Davidson (acting dean), BCL 1863, DCL 1875, LLD 1912
- 1915–1921: Robert Warden Lee, DCL 1877
- 1921–1928: R. A. E. Greenshields (acting dean, 1921–1923), BCL 1885, LLD 1929
- 1928–1936: Percy Ellwood Corbett, DCL 1961
- 1936–1946: C. Stuart Lemesurier, BCL 1912
- 1946: John P. Humphrey (dean designate), BCL 1929, PhD 1945, LLD 1976
- 1946–1949: C. Stuart Lemesurier, BCL 1912
- 1949: Gérald Fauteux, LLD 1955
- 1950: A. Sydney Bruneau, BCL 1917
- 1950–1960: W. C. J. Meredith
- 1960–1961: Maxwell Cohen (acting dean), LLD 1994
- 1961–1964: F. R. Scott, BCL 1927, LLD 1967
- 1964–1969: Maxwell Cohen, LLD 1994
- 1969–1974: John W. Durnford, BCL 1952
- 1974–1979: John E. C. Brierley, BCL 1959
- 1979–1980: William Foster (acting dean)
- 1980–1984: John E. C. Brierley, BCL 1959
- 1984–1989: Roderick A. Macdonald
- 1989–1994: Yves-Marie Morissette
- 1994–1999: Stephen Toope, BCL 1983, LLB 1983, LLD 2017
- 1999–2003: Peter Leuprecht
- 2003–2009: Nicholas Kasirer, BCL 1985, LLB 1985
- 2009: Shauna Van Praagh (acting dean)
- 2009–2016: Daniel Jutras (acting dean, 2009–2010)
- 2016–present: Robert Leckey, BCL 2002, LLB 2002
Student life
Law Student Association
The overarching student organization is the Law Student's Association (LSA): an elected group of law students who represent the student body. The LSA was created in 1912 and incorporated in 1992.[105][106] The executives and representatives of the LSA are elected by McGill's law students.
During the school year, the LSA hosts a weekly coffeehouse on Thursday evenings designed to encourage students to network and socialize over food and drink. The coffeehouse tradition was started in 1989 by David Lametti when he was part of the LSA.[107][108] Some coffeehouse events are sponsored by law firms for networking with students, while others are hosted by student associations and clubs.[107]
Christie Bike Ride
The Dugald Christie Memorial Community Bike Ride, also called the Christie Bike Ride, is an annual charity fundraiser organized by McGill Law students. Funds are distributed to local organizations that increase access to justice, especially for marginalized communities. Past recipients of the funds include Project Genesis, Head and Hands, and the Native Women's Shelter of Montreal.[109]
The Christie Bike Ride was started in 2009 in honour of alumnus Dugald Christie.[109] Christie was a Vancouver-based lawyer that championed access to justice for low-income communities. He was killed while cycling from Vancouver to Ottawa to raise awareness about access to justice.[110]
Journals
McGill Law Journal
The McGill Law Journal (MLJ) was founded by Gerald Le Dain and Jacques-Yvan Morin in 1952. The MLJ publishes four volumes a year on general law topics. The MLJ is frequently cited by the Supreme Court of Canada and is the most cited student-run law journal by the Court.[111]
The McGill Law Journal also publishes the Canadian Guide to Uniform Legal Citation. The original Guide was published in 1986 and was intended to standardize Canadian legal citations.[112] Today, the Guide is used by most Canadian legal journals.[112] The McGill Law Journal regularly hosts office hours to assist McGill students using the Canadian Guide to Uniform Legal Citation.[113]
McGill Journal of Sustainable Development Law
The McGill Journal of Sustainable Development Law (MJSDL) was established in 2004 and focuses on sustainable development and environmental law and policy.[114] It is peer-reviewed and published bi-annually.
McGill Journal of Law and Health
The McGill Journal of Law and Health (MJLH) was established in 2007. It is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal and is published annually.[115] The MJLH focuses on health law and has been cited four times by the Supreme Court of Canada.[116][117][118][119] Most recently, an article from the journal was cited in the Reference Re Assisted Human Reproduction Act.
McGill Journal of Dispute Resolution
The McGill Journal of Dispute Resolution (MJDR) is a bilingual peer-reviewed academic journal dedicated to scholarship in the fields of arbitration, mediation, facilitation, negotiation and other forms of alternative dispute resolution.[120][121] The McGill Journal of Dispute Resolution was first published in 2015.[122]
Legal Information Clinic at McGill
The Legal Information Clinic at McGill is a non-profit legal information clinic for McGill students and the Montreal community.[121][123] The Legal Information Clinic is a separate entity from McGill but is run by McGill law students. Originally founded in 1973 by then-law student Michael Bergman, the Clinic works on more than 2,000 cases a year.[123][124]
The Clinic also provides a student advocacy service for McGill students accused of disciplinary offences or looking to resolve disputes with McGill University.[123][124]
Quid Novi
Quid Novi, also known colloquially as the Quid, is the Faculty of Law's student-run newspaper. Since the publication of its first edition in March 1981, Quid Novi has been a forum for both students and faculty to share news and opinions on both legal and non-legal matters.[125][126] Quid Novi is published on a weekly basis during the academic year.
L.E.X. Outreach Program
The Faculty of Law of McGill University founded the Law-Éducation-Connexion Outreach Program, also called the L.E.X. Outreach Program, in 2006.[127] The program has law student volunteers deliver presentations at local schools and answer student questions. The program targets youth in communities that are traditionally underrepresented in the legal field and schools that have high dropout rates, with the goal of encouraging an interest in post-secondary education and legal studies.[128] In 2009, the program was expanded following a donation from the Beaverbrook Canadian Foundation.[129]
See also
- List of law schools in Canada
- McGill Law Journal
- McGill Journal of Sustainable Development Law
- Canadian Guide to Uniform Legal Citation
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