University of Manitoba, Faculty of Law explained

University of Manitoba, Faculty of Law
Motto:Justice, Integrity, Excellence
Established:1914[1]
Dean:Richard Jochelson
President:Michael Benarroch
Country:Canada
Students:306[2]
Faculty:67
Mascot:Bison
Free Label:Sports team
Website:http://umanitoba.ca/law

The University of Manitoba, Faculty of Law is the law school located in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. It is on the university's Fort Garry campus. The Faculty is located within the Robson Hall building, named after one of the two founders of the law school, Hugh Amos Robson.

History

In 1914, Hugh Amos Robson, a judge on the Court of King's Bench in Manitoba, and Esten Kenneth Williams, a recent graduate of Osgoode Hall Law School, established the Manitoba Law School. The school was sponsored by the Law Society of Manitoba (LSM) and the University of Manitoba.[3] In 1969, the school moved from the law courts in downtown Winnipeg to its current location.[4] Prior to 1914, Manitoba lawyers usually studied at Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto or law schools in Europe. In 1877, the LSM established an articling system and exam protocols with the goal of educating lawyers in Manitoba. In 1891, at the request of law students, the LSM established a set of lectures which included common law practice, criminal law, practice in criminal cases, and equity jurisprudence.[5]

Programs

Robson Hall currently offers J.D. (Juris Doctor) and a LL.M. (Master of Laws) programs. The latter program was brought into existence in 1949 by the Manitoba Law School and it was substantially revamped by the Faculty of Law in 1968. Robson Hall is known for its advocacy and clinical components, which include several required and optional courses in legal advocacy, negotiation, legal methods, judge shadowing, mooting, and intensive clinical opportunities throughout the degree program. It continues to enjoy a national reputation as a practice-oriented clinical school and as a scholarly centre of legal learning with a human rights and indigenous practice focus. The school has won over thirteen Western Canada Moot Trial Competitions, and routinely places at national moot competitions.

Robson Hall is home to the Marcel A. Desautels Centre for Private Enterprise and the Law. The Centre was formed with a mandate to "integrate the disciplines of law, business and the humanities as they apply to family-controlled and other private enterprises, the principal foundation of all economic activity in Canada."[6] The Centre provides academic programs that allow students to be trained with the necessary skills to provide well-rounded legal representation and advice to a variety of private businesses.

In 1999, the Faculty of Law established the Asper Chair of International Business and Trade Law. The Asper Chair "sponsors a variety of research including bi-annual academic conferences in international business and trade law".[7] The program features "an internship program allows up to four students a year to work with the Asper Chair and creates opportunities for students to advance their education, while gaining skills necessary to pursue careers in law or business with an international focus".[8] Additionally, students involved in the Asper program "have the opportunity to participate in international commercial dispute resolution competitions".[9]

Robson Hall is also home to the Legal Research Institute, funded by the Law Foundation of Manitoba, which awards research funding and grants to meritorious applicants engaged in various research projects vital to legal practice in Manitoba.[10]

Notable alumni

Justices of the Supreme Court of Canada

Other notables

Notable professors

Notable sessional instructors

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alumni Report. Summer 2013. 28 March 2016. University of Manitoba Faculty of Law Robson Hall.
  2. http://www.lsac.org/jd/choosing-a-law-school/canadian/key-facts LSAC - JD: Canadian Law School Profiles
  3. Web site: Our History – UM Faculty of Law . 2022-05-02 . en-US.
  4. (lacks a verifiable source for the location t the law courts.
  5. News: 7 January 1891 . Law Society Lecture . 3 . The Winnipeg Daily Tribune.
  6. Web site: University of Manitoba: Faculty of Law . law.robsonhall.ca . 2015-02-14 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150214222543/http://law.robsonhall.ca/research-centres/marcel-a-desautels-centre-for-private-enterprise-and-the-law . 2015-02-14 .
  7. Web site: University of Manitoba: Faculty of Law . law.robsonhall.ca . 2017-03-23.
  8. Web site: University of Manitoba: Faculty of Law . law.robsonhall.ca . 2017-03-23.
  9. Web site: University of Manitoba: Faculty of Law . law.robsonhall.ca . 2017-03-23.
  10. Web site: University of Manitoba: Faculty of Law . Umanitoba.ca . 2012-04-01 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20101007105558/http://www.umanitoba.ca/Law/newsite/research.php?page=lri . 2010-10-07 .
  11. Web site: June 9, 2023 . Manitoba government appoints two new judges to provincial court in Winnipeg .