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It was first published in 1949 as a collection of legal essays entitled the UBC Legal Notes. In 1959, it officially became the UBC Law Review. It was incorporated as a non-profit society in 1966. The UBC Law Review is a top ranking scholarly publication in Canada and globally, alongside the University of Toronto Law Journal and McGill Law ...
"Spaces and Challenges: Feminism in Legal Academia" (2011) 44(1) UBC Law Review 205-220 "Relocation, indeterminacy, and burden of proof: lessons from Canada" (2011) 23(2) Child and Family Law Qtly 155–177. "Joint Custody and Guardianship in the British Columbia Courts: Not a Cautious Approach" (2010) 29 Canadian Family Law Quarterly 223–252.
The new Law building re-opened on September 17, 1976, as the "George F. Curtis Building." Curtis kept an office in the building until 2005, when he died at the age of 99. In August 2011, UBC Law will move into a brand new building on the same site named Allard Hall.
Allan McEachern, former Chancellor of UBC and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia; Michael Omolewa, historian, diplomat and former President of UNESCO General Conference; Wally Oppal, former Attorney General of British Columbia; Stephen Owen, former Member of Parliament; former UBC V–P of External, Legal and Community Relations
While a University of British Columbia law faculty member, he was invited to be part of a government-appointed Committee of Special Advisors assembled to draft legislation which became the Labour Code of British Columbia Act of 1973. [8] At age 30, he became deputy minister of labor in British Columbia.
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Joel Conrad Bakan (born 1959) is an American-Canadian writer, jazz musician, [1] filmmaker, [2] and professor at the Peter A. Allard School of Law at the University of British Columbia. [ 3 ] Born in Lansing, Michigan , and raised for most of his childhood in East Lansing , Michigan, where his parents, Paul and Rita Bakan, were both long-time ...
Andrew Petter was born in Victoria, British Columbia in 1953, and grew up in the adjacent suburb of Oak Bay. [1] [2] His grandfather Ernest Petter was an English industrialist who unsuccessfully ran for the House of Commons of the United Kingdom on three occasions before moving to the Vancouver Island town of Comox in 1938; he then lived for a while in Saanich before moving back to the UK in 1954.