New video explores the importance of understanding the land acknowledgement

Ruth Koleszar-Green

What is the land acknowledgement? Why is it important and what does it mean? These questions are at the heart of a new video produced through a collaborative effort involving the Centre for Aboriginal Student Services (CASS) at York University; Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Deborah McGregor, Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Environmental Justice; School of Social Work Professor Ruth Koleszar-Green, special advisor to the president on Indigenous initiatives; and Amy Desjarlais, traditional knowledge keeper.

The video, which was funded by the Office of the Vice-Provost Academic, explains the statements included in the land acknowledgement, the history of the traditional territory of the Indigenous Peoples who called the Keele and Glendon Campus lands their home before the arrival of the settlers and the Dish With One Spoon Treaty that covers the area.

For several years now, major events at York University such as convocation, conferences and symposiums have begun with a recitation of the University’s land acknowledgement, which reads as follows:

We recognize that many Indigenous nations have longstanding relationships with the territories upon which York University campuses are located that precede the establishment of York University. York University acknowledges its presence on the traditional territory of many Indigenous Nations. The area known as Tkaronto has been care taken by the Anishinabek Nation, the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, the Wendat, and the Métis. It is now home to many Indigenous Peoples. We acknowledge the current treaty holders and the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation. This territory is subject of the Dish With One Spoon Wampum Belt Covenant, an agreement to peaceably share and care for the Great Lakes region.

The land acknowledgement is an important part of reconciliation following the findings of the 2015 Truth & Reconciliation Commission of Canada and its calls to action, Koleszar-Green said. (It was most recently updated to include the name change by the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation, formerly the Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation.)

Koleszar-Green said many Indigenous community members are becoming increasingly concerned that people are becoming tone-deaf to the importance of the land acknowledgement or regard it as a checkbox to be performed at events for political correctness and are losing sight of its significance to the efforts underway to indigenize the academy.

“It is important to take time during the land acknowledgement to pause and reflect on what it means and how it applies to the University and beyond,” she says. “For example, what do non-Indigenous people know about the Dish With One Spoon Territory, or the fact that it is a treaty to share and protect the land?” said Koleszar-Green.

She has a request for faculty, staff and students at York University: “Watch the video and reflect on the teachings it contains, reflect on how it applies to what you are learning, teaching or working on,” she said, noting that the land acknowledgement and their reflections on its meaning it can be applied to deepen the understanding of the theories contained in engineering, science, liberal arts, fine arts, environmental studies, professional studies, business and the law.

“When you hear the land acknowledgement and it talks about the Dish With One Spoon Wampum Belt Covenant treaty,” said Koleszar-Green, “the central circle represents a dish, and in that dish the great peacemaker, the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, cut up the beaver tail and put it in that dish, so we can serve it to each other with one spoon. That dish has three simple teachings. First, never take more than your share. Second, make sure there’s enough food to go around for everybody. Number three, don’t foul the dish or take the dish.”

There is a rich history to the area known as Tkaronto, and the peaceable agreement to share and care for the Great Lakes region – a history, said Koleszar-Green, that can deepen and enrich teaching, learning and research at the University.

York alumnus Jay S. Hennick appointed a member of the Order of Canada

Image shows the Order of Canada medals laid out on a black backgroundYork alumnus and honorary degree recipient Jay S. Hennick (BA ’78, LLD ’11) has been named a member of the Order of Canada. Hennick is among the 103 new appointments to the Order of Canada announced on Dec. 27 by Governor General of Canada Julie Payette.

“On behalf of all of the entire York community, I wish to extend my warmest congratulations to Jay Hennick on this recognition of the outstanding vision and generosity he has demonstrated throughout his career,” said President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton. “York University is proud to be able to call Mr. Hennick an alumnus, honorary degree recipient and a supporter, and his dedication to both excellence and philanthropy make him an extraordinary role model for our students.”

Jay Hennick

Hennick earned a bachelor of arts degree from York University and a doctor of laws degree from the University of Ottawa. He worked in corporate law for 13 years before establishing FirstService Corporation. In 2015, FirstService separated into two independent public companies and Hennick assumed the role of global Chair, CEO and largest shareholder of Colliers International Group Inc., one of the world’s largest and fastest growing commercial real estate service firms. He is the former Chair of Sinai Health System’s Board of Directors and former Chair of Mount Sinai Hospital. Hennick and his wife, Barbara, established the Jay & Barbara Hennick Foundation, which contributes to many charitable causes in health care and education, including the Hennick Centre of Business & Law, a joint program of Osgoode Hall Law School and the Schulich School of Business; the Jay Hennick JD – MBA Program at the University of Ottawa; and the Hennick Family Wellness Centre at Mount Sinai Hospital.

The new list includes two companions (C.C.), 15 officers (O.C.) and 86 members (C.M.). The Order of Canada recognizes outstanding achievement, dedication to community and service to the nation by those who have enriched the lives of others and made a difference to Canada. It is the country’s highest honour for lifetime achievement.

Year in Review 2018: Top headlines for York University, October to December

Year in Review 2018

As a new year emerges, YFile takes a look back on 2018 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series, and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for October to December 2018, as chosen by YFile editors.

October
Carla Lipsig-Mummé

York U Professor Carla Lipsig-Mummé recognized with prestigious SSHRC Impact Award
York University Professor Carla Lipsig-Mummé, of the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, was recognized for excellence in research by the Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC). Lipsig-Mummé, a professor of work and labour studies, is the recipient of the SSHRC’s prestigious Impact Award (Partnership Category). She is currently principal investigator of the Adapting Canadian Work and Workplaces to Respond to Climate Change project, which brings together 56 individual researchers and 25 partner organizations and unions in seven countries. Its groundbreaking work has been recognized by the Secretariat of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Schulich celebrates completion of campus expansion project
The Schulich School of Business community came together on Sunday, Oct. 21 to celebrate the official completion of the Rob and Cheryl McEwen Graduate Study & Research Building. This campus expansion was one of the five major pillars of Leading Change, Schulich’s most comprehensive fundraising and alumni engagement campaign to date. The ceremony was attended by more than 300 guests, including students, faculty, staff, alumni and friends of the University.

York University English Language Institute named World Language School of the Year
The York University English Language Institute (YUELI) was recognized as the 2018-19 World Language School of the Year – North America by iStudy Guide. The award is the highest recognition for a language institution. YUELI provides English-language instruction for academic and professional purposes and serves approximately 3,000 students from more than 50 different countries every year.

Lassonde School of Engineering graduate students Zhongpan Wu and Karim Hammad at Innovation 360
Lassonde School of Engineering graduate students Zhongpan Wu and Karim Hammad at Innovation 360

Lassonde graduate students win awards for work in DNA sequencing
Graduate students from the Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science in the Lassonde School of Engineering won two industry awards for their work on custom computers that are helping to propel DNA sequencing into a low-cost mobile activity. Lassonde grad students Zhongpan Wu, Karim Hammad and Yunus Dawji, along with Assistant Professor Ebrahim Ghafar-Zadeh and Associate Professor Sebastian Magierowski, are making significant contributions in the field of DNA sequencing by developing specially designed hardware intended to increase the rate at which DNA measurements can be processed and decrease the power consumption required to do so.

November

Chemistry prof receives Petro-Canada Young Innovator Award
Darwinian evolution in a lab. That’s how this year’s winner of the Petro-Canada Young Innovator Award, Assistant Professor Ryan Hili, concisely describes what he does in his chemistry lab in the Faculty of Science. It’s also what won him the Petro-Canada Young Innovator Award, a distinction that recognizes outstanding early career faculty. The award program is a commitment by Petro-Canada (now Suncor Energy Inc.) and York University to encourage excellence in teaching and research that will enrich the learning environment and contribute to society.

Leading thinkers gather at York University to discuss countdown to Canadian climate action
To understand how climate change already impacts human health in Canada and around the world, leading scientific and civil society organizations gathered at York University on Nov. 29. The day-long event focused on findings contained in the Lancet Countdown: Tracking Progress on Health and Climate Change, a Lancet-led yearly review of the world’s response to climate change and how it affects human health globally.

Passion for Indigenous pedagogy fuels Professor Ruth Koleszar-Green’s work
Koleszar-Green’s application of Indigenous pedagogy to her teaching has earned her a 2018 President’s University-wide Teaching Award. She was one of five people selected by the Senate Committee on Awards for their imaginative and significant contributions to enhancing the quality of learning for students enrolled at York University.

Laurence Harris
Laurence Harris

York University research to start with Canadian astronaut in space
Canadian Space Agency astronaut David Saint-Jacques launched to the International Space Station (ISS) on Dec. 3. Soon after his arrival, some important research from York University Professor Laurence Harris began. This effort could one day help research in the areas of Parkinson’s disease, stroke recovery, damaged organs, aging and remote robots used for surgery. Harris is leading a virtual reality experiment, some equipment for which recently travelled to the ISS on NASA’s Northrop Grumman’s commercial resupply mission. While Harris will remain on Earth, his research will investigate the effects of microgravity on astronauts’ perception of their motion. 

December

York-led research results in breakthrough discovery for obesity-related health issues
New research led by York University Faculty of Health Professor Tara Haas could be considered a breakthrough discovery in understanding obesity-associated events that worsen an individual’s health. Haas and a multidisciplinary team of scientists investigated the cause of a vascular dysfunction that links obesity with undesirable health outcomes, such as inflammation and diabetes, and made a novel finding that blood vessels may participate in the control of whole-body energy balance.

Professor Emeritus Neil Brooks receives Canadian Tax Foundation Lifetime Contribution Award
York University Professor Emeritus Neil Brooks was named the recipient of the Canadian Tax Foundation (CTF) Lifetime Contribution Award. The most prestigious award given out by the foundation, it honours individuals who, over their careers, have made substantial contributions to the CTF and its purposes through their volunteer efforts and body of work. Brooks was a professor at Osgoode Hall Law School, where he taught tax law and policy for more than 35 years.

Rob Bowman
Rob Bowman

York University music Professor Rob Bowman receives Grammy nomination for Best Historical Album
York University’s famous “rock ‘n’ roll professor,” Rob Bowman, was nominated for a Grammy Award in the Best Historical Album category as co-producer of the Numero Group’s 2017 two-disc compilation Jackie Shane: Any Other Way. This is Bowman’s sixth Grammy nomination and second as producer. In 1996, he won the Grammy for Best Album Notes for his 47,000-word monograph accompanying the 10-CD boxed set of The Complete Stax/Volt Soul Singles, Vol. 3: 1972-1975.

New online portal details how climate change will impact Ontario
York University’s Laboratory of Mathematical Parallel Systems (LAMPS) is exploring how climate change will affect Ontario in a new online portal containing hundreds of thousands of data points, maps, graphs and predictions. The Ontario Climate Data Portal, led by Huaiping Zhu, a professor of mathematics and statistics and director of LAMPS in the Faculty of Science, based calculations on the greenhouse gas concentration trajectories adopted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

This concludes the four-part YFile series for Year in Review 2018: Top headlines at York University.

Year in Review 2018: Top headlines for York University, July to September

Year in Review 2018

As a new year emerges, YFile takes a look back on 2018 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series, and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for July to September 2018, as chosen by YFile editors.

July

Can dementia be reversed? York U researchers say there may be a way
Researchers in York University’s Faculty of Health found that just 30 minutes of visually guided movements per week can slow and even reverse the progress of dementia. Those in the early stages of dementia who were exposed for 30 minutes a week to a cognitive-motor training game – which used rules to make visually guided movements – were able to slow down the progress of dementia and, for some, even reverse their cognitive function to healthy status.

York University PhD students Susan Chiblow, Leigha Comer, Rivka Green, Natasha Henry and Hannah Rackow have been awarded prestigious Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships
York University PhD students Susan Chiblow, Leigha Comer, Rivka Green, Natasha Henry and Hannah Rackow have been awarded prestigious Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships

York University celebrates recipients of prestigious Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship
PhD students Susan Chiblow, Leigha Comer, Rivka Green, Natasha Henry and Hannah Rackow were awarded prestigious Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships, receiving $50,000 annually for up to three years to support their research projects. Vanier Scholars demonstrate leadership skills and a high standard of scholarly achievement in graduate studies in the social sciences and/or humanities, natural sciences and/or engineering and health.

The Economist ranks Kellogg-Schulich EMBA No. 1 in Canada, No. 8 in the world
The Economist magazine ranked the Kellogg-Schulich Executive MBA eighth in the world and No. 1 in Canada in its EMBA ranking. The Kellogg-Schulich Executive MBA program in the Schulich School of Business at York University has consistently rated among the top 10 in the world by The Economist in each of the three EMBA rankings it has conducted.

York researchers partner in $3.5-million refugee study
Four executive committee members of York University’s Centre for Refugee Studies were successful co-applicants and collaborators in the Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) Partnership Grant titled “Civil society and the global refugee regime: Understanding and enhancing impact through the implementation of global refugee policy.” The project’s total budget is $3.5 million, with the SSHRC contributing almost $2.5 million.

August

York University launches the President’s Ambassador Program
Designed to provide York students with a unique perspective on the University community, the President’s Ambassador Program offers opportunities for current students to serve as representatives of the University and to share their experiences as York students with fellow students, staff, faculty and alumni. Students selected for the program will attend a number of institutional and community events, including alumni receptions and government announcements.

Professors Jennifer Steele, Gabrielle Slowey and Joan Judge

Three York University professors earn York-Massey appointments
York University Professors Jennifer Steele, Gabrielle Slowey and Joan Judge earned Massey College appointments for the 2018-19 academic year. Steele, of the Faculty of Health, was awarded a York-Massey Fellowship, while York-Massey Visiting Scholarships were awarded to Slowey and Judge, both of the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies. The fellowship provides the selected faculty member with prime office space in the college for the academic year and the status of a full senior resident of the college, with all privileges enjoyed by senior Fellows. The title “York Fellow of Massey College” remains for life or while mutually agreeable.

York University announces 2018 Sport Hall of Fame inductees
York University Athletics & Recreation and the School of Kinesiology & Health Science welcomed four student-athletes, one coach and, for the first time in school history, a team as inductees into the York University Sport Hall of Fame’s class of 2018. This year’s inductees were: basketball player Mark Bellai, track and field athlete Craig Cavanagh, field hockey player Tammy Holt, rugby player Cheryl Phillips and tennis coach Eric Bojesen. The 1969-70 men’s hockey team will also enter the Sport Hall of Fame as the inaugural team inductee.

Allan Carswell

Stellar $3M endowment will help York students, community reach for the stars
With a galactic $3-million investment, made in partnership with York University Professor Emeritus Allan Carswell and the Carswell Family Foundation, York University will share the wonders of the universe with students, youth in the community and the public through the creation of a new Chair. The Allan I. Carswell Chair for the Public Understanding of Astronomy in the Faculty of Science, thought to be the first of its kind in North America, will be dedicated to science engagement and outreach. It will benefit students and the public through education and activities, involving telescopes at the Allan I. Carswell Observatory, as well as novel technologies such as virtual reality. The endowment will also support the York Science Communicator in Residence program to enhance student learning opportunities in science communications.

September

York Research Chairs Program expanding with competition this fall
Launched in 2014, the York Research Chairs Program (YRC) was developed as York University’s internal counterpart to the national Canada Research Chairs Program. The YRC recognizes outstanding researchers at York and is designed to build, support and intensify the world-renowned scholarship, research and creative activities at the University. The program expanded with seven centrally supported Chairs available and there will also be up to two additional Chairs linked to the Vision: Science to Applications Canada First Research Excellence Fund program.

Five York University professors elected to the Royal Society of Canada
The Royal Society of Canada (RSC) elected four York University professors to its ranks as Fellows and one professor as a member of the RSC’s College of New Scholars, Artists & Scientists. The University’s newest members of the RSC are Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies Professors Wenona Giles and Joan Judge of the School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design, and Professor Paul Sych, as well as Osgoode Hall Law School Professor David Vaver. Lassonde School of Engineering Professor John Moores has been named a member of the RSC’s College of New Scholars, Artists & Scientists.

York leads experiential education pilot program in Ontario high schools
York University’s Faculty of Education is leading an experiential education pilot project in high schools across Ontario that aims to build students’ capacity for civic action. The Youth in Politics (#YiP) Project, led by Nombuso Dlamini and co-led by Uzo Anucha, both associate professors at York University, hypothesizes that student-facilitated and student-structured civic activities encourage parental election interest. The project supports and builds the civic capacity of students to engage parents in local governance issues, using the school board trustees election as a case study.

Jean-Michel Lemieux, senior vice-president of Engineering at Shopify with Rhonda Lenton, president and vice-chancellor of York University
Jean-Michel Lemieux, senior vice-president of engineering at Shopify, with Rhonda L. Lenton, president and vice-chancellor of York University

Shopify and Lassonde School of Engineering partner to offer innovative computer science degree program
A new partnership that reflects the future of experiential learning brings an innovative model of education to York University. York University’s Lassonde School of Engineering has partnered with Canadian commerce company Shopify to bring a visionary education opportunity called Dev Degree to the Greater Toronto Area for the first time. The unique program embeds students directly into development teams at Shopify through a paid internship that culminates with a unique honours bachelor of computer science degree. Shopify also pays the students’ tuition for the full four-year program.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, October to December 2018.

Year in review 2018: Top headlines at York University, January to March

Year in Review 2018

As a new year emerges, YFile takes a look back on 2018 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for January to March 2018, as chosen by YFile editors.

January

Indigenous Environmental Justice Project offers unparalleled resource
What does environmental justice mean to Indigenous Peoples? How can it be addressed? These are two of the foundational questions raised by the Indigenous Environmental Justice Project (IEJ), a five-year initiative funded by the Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC). The York University-based project is the brainchild of Osgoode Hall Law School’s Professor Deborah McGregor, Canada Research Chair (CRC) in Indigenous Environmental Justice, cross-appointed to the Faculty of Environmental Studies.

Having knowledge on how to operate and analyze the results of a test on space materials in crucial to obtaining a space-related job or career in the future. Pictured above is the International Space Station, a living laboratory of space engineering, hardware and materials. Photo: NASA
Having knowledge on how to operate and analyze the results of a test on space materials in crucial to obtaining a space-related job or career in the future. Pictured above is the International Space Station, a living laboratory of space engineering, hardware and materials. Photo: NASA

Space engineers test for good vibrations
Space engineering graduates from York University should have a leg up on other job candidates, given the practical experience they are getting in their Materials for Space Applications and Space Hardware courses. Lecturer Hugh Chesser and fellow members of the program’s curriculum committee have been able to “inject more experiential work into the curriculum, work that the students would experience during their careers,” thanks to testing equipment purchased with the help of an Academic Innovation Fund grant.

Investment in vaccine mathematics a powerful tool to combat infectious diseases
A major new research initiative based in the Faculty of Science at York University will develop mathematical techniques to identify populations most susceptible to infectious diseases and enable manufacturers to produce cost-effective vaccines that can be deployed quickly. The research is also expected to better position Canada to respond rapidly to emerging public health issues such as Zika outbreaks. The $2.6-million NSERC/Sanofi Industrial Research Chair in Vaccine Mathematics, Modelling and Manufacturing, awarded to York University Distinguished Research Professor Jianhong Wu, was announced at York on Tuesday, Jan. 23.

Osgoode scholars’ work contributes to new Canadian Ombudsperson for Responsible Enterprise
A number of Osgoode Hall Law School professors have been working for years on transnational corporate accountability for human rights and environmental violations by Canadian companies in other countries. This includes, most recently, the work of Professor Emeritus Shin Imai and the students who have worked with him for several years in the Justice and Corporate Accountability Project (JCAP), the work of which the Nathanson Centre on Transnational Human Rights, Crime and Security is proud to have funded and otherwise supported.

February
Seyed Moghadas

Two York University mathematicians determine how to stay a step ahead of C. difficile
Clostridium Difficile, or C. difficile, strikes fear into the hearts of many. This life-threatening infection, caused through contact with bacteria, can develop rapidly even under the watchful eye of hospital staff. Two researchers, Professor Seyed Moghadas and PhD student Sara Maghdoori, mathematicians in York University’s Agent-Based Modelling Laboratory in the Faculty of Science, wanted to evaluate strategies for reducing this risk. Their research is funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC).

AMPD honours ‘Offshore’ documentary creator at inaugural research celebration, Feb. 14
The School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design (AMPD) at York University honoured one of its own during the inaugural AMPD Research Celebration on Feb. 14. Cinema & Media Arts Professor Brenda Longfellow was presented with the AMPD Research Award in recognition of her outstanding work. She launched the interactive web documentary Offshore, funded by the Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada, and co-directed with Glen Richards and Helios Design Lab. Offshore can be viewed at offshore-interactive.com/site.

An engineer uses a tablet to control a heavy automation robot arm machine in smart factory

York University will participate in the new Innovation Superclusters initiative
York University applauds the Government of Canada’s $950-million investment in the Innovation Superclusters Initiative, a commitment that will be matched, dollar for dollar, by the private sector. The Advanced Manufacturing Supercluster, in which York University is proud to be a participant, is an exciting initiative that will help to substantially propel our region into a globally leading centre for advanced manufacturing, which is critical to the success of the Canadian economy.

York research informs special report on Canada’s role in global health
York University Professor Steven Hoffman is among a cohort of Canadian scholars to author a special report for The Lancet that examines Canada’s system of universal health coverage and role in global health. The two papers, authored by leading scholars, indicate the Canadian government must match its public declarations with concrete action on issues such as disparities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples’ health, health system reform, and flagging levels of overseas aid, if it is to renew its legacy of leadership in health.

March

Carla Lipsig-Mummé wins 2018 Sefton-Williams Award
York University Professor Carla Lipsig-Mummé was named the 2018 winner of the Sefton-Williams Award for Contributions to Labour Relations. It honours those who have made a significant contribution to the field of labour relations and human rights. The Sefton-Williams award is presented by the University of Toronto’s Woodsworth College and the Centre for Industrial Relations and Human Resources. Both practitioners in labour relations as well as academics have received this award.

Prof. Pat Armstrong among YWCA’s 2018 Women of Distinction
York University Professor Pat Armstrong is one of eight women recognized by the YWCA Toronto for her outstanding contributions to and leadership in improving the lives of women. Armstrong, a distinguished research professor of sociology in the Faculty of Liberal Arts &  Professional Studies (LAPS), is a 2018 YWCA Toronto Women of Distinction recipient in the category of Health & Education. She was recognized with the award for her work on pay equity, women’s work, women’s studies and women and health care reform.

QS rankings put York University in the top 10 in 15 subject areas
York University ranks among Canada’s top universities in the arts and humanities, law and legal studies, social sciences, and business management according to the 2018 QS World University Rankings by Subject report released Feb. 28. “These rankings are a reflection of York’s success in providing students access to a high-quality, research-intensive learning environment, with academic programming that is enriched by experiential learning opportunities, innovative scholars and researchers who are making breakthroughs in their chosen fields, and a shared commitment to having a positive impact on the wellbeing of society,” said York University President & Vice-Chancellor Rhonda Lenton.

Developers' Den Schulich
The Developers’ Den winning team 2018 is from Schulich School of Business

Schulich students clinch first place title at Developers’ Den competition
A team of students enrolled in the Master of Real Estate and Infrastructure (MREI) program at York University’s Schulich School of Business won first place in the eighth annual Developers’ Den international case competition. The students beat out 11 other teams from leading graduate business and professional school programs. A team of MBA students from the Ivey School of Business placed second and an MBA team from the Schulich School of Business placed third.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review 2018: Top headlines at York University, April to June.

Government of Canada names Lorne Sossin in judicial appointments in province of Ontario

Image of Lorne Sossin, Dean of Osgoode Hall Law School

Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Lorne Sossin will be leaving York University to serve the Government of Canada as a judge of the Superior Court of Justice of Ontario in Toronto. Sossin’s appointment was announced Dec. 13 by Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada Jody Wilson-Raybould.

Lorne Sossin
Lorne Sossin

The appointment was made under the new judicial application process introduced on Oct. 20, 2016, which emphasizes transparency, merit and diversity, and will continue to ensure the appointment of jurists who meet the highest standards of excellence and integrity.

Sossin, a longtime faculty member at Osgoode Hall Law School, replaces Justice E.M. Stewart, who elected to become a supernumerary judge effective Sept. 26.

Earlier this year, Sossin stepped down from his post as dean of Osgoode, which he held since 2010. As dean, Sossin pursued initiatives for accessibility in legal education, the expansion of legal clinics and experiential learning, community engagement and reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples.

“Lorne has made an enormous contribution to legal education generally and to the Osgoode-York community in particular,” said Mary Condon, dean (interim) of Osgoode Hall Law School. “We are going to miss his inspiring leadership, including on Indigenous issues, keen legal mind, inclusiveness and wonderful optimism. We wish him all the best in this exciting new chapter of his career and hope that he will stay in touch.”

Prior to his appointment as dean, he was a professor with the Faculty of Law at the University of Toronto (2002-10). He is a former associate dean of the University of Toronto (2004-07) and served as the inaugural director of the Centre for the Legal Profession (2008-10). Previously (1997-2002), he was a faculty member at Osgoode Hall Law School and in the Department of Political Science at York University.

His teaching interests span administrative and constitutional law, the regulation of professions, civil litigation, public policy and the judicial process.

After graduating from Osgoode Hall Law School in 1992, Sossin was a law clerk to former chief justice Antonio Lamer of the Supreme Court of Canada, a former associate in law at Columbia Law School and a former litigation lawyer with the firm of Borden & Elliot (now Borden Ladner Gervais LLP).

He was admitted to the Ontario bar in 1996, and holds doctorates in political science from the University of Toronto (1993) and in law from Columbia University (1999).

A prolific writer, Sossin is the author, co-author, editor or co-editor of 12 books and more than 100 articles and book chapters across a wide variety of legal fields, including administrative and constitutional law, legal process, legal ethics and civil litigation. He was the recipient of the 2012 David Mundell Medal for excellence in legal writing and was twice selected as one of Canadian Lawyer’s Top 25 Most Influential Lawyers.

Sossin has contributed as a board member to numerous organizations, including the National Judicial Institute, the Law Foundation of Ontario and the Law Commission of Ontario. He also served as the vice-chair of the Ontario Health Professions Appeal & Review Board and the Health Services Appeal & Review Board, and as the integrity commissioner and the open meeting investigator for the City of Toronto. Sossin has been active in several community organizations, including as Chair of Reena’s Board of Directors.

“Teachers, mentors, colleagues and friends here have enriched my experiences in the classroom, in scholarship, in the life of the University and in my life outside the University in more ways than I can count,” said Sossin. “While I am looking forward to the adventures to come, I wanted to express how incredibly lucky I have been to be a part of the Osgoode and York community.”

Federal judicial appointments are made by the governor general, acting on the advice of the federal cabinet and recommendations from the minister of justice.

Professor Emeritus Neil Brooks receives Canadian Tax Foundation Lifetime Contribution Award

Osgoode teams take first and second at Canadian National Negotiation Competition

York University Professor Emeritus Neil Brooks was named the recipient of the Canadian Tax Foundation (CTF) Lifetime Contribution Award in recognition of his outstanding contributions to the foundation.

Neil Brooks
Neil Brooks

The Lifetime Contribution Award is the most prestigious award given by the Canadian Tax Foundation. It honours individuals who, over their careers, have made substantial contributions to the CTF and its purposes through their volunteer efforts and body of work over a number of years.

Brooks was a professor at Osgoode Hall Law School, where he taught tax law and policy for more than 35 years. His research interests included tax law and policy, corporate and international tax, and financing the welfare state.

He published extensively on income tax issues and was the editor of Canadian Taxation, Osgoode Hall Law Journal and the Canadian Tax Journal. He also co-authored The Trouble with Billionaires (2010) with Linda McQuaig.

Brooks has been a consultant on tax policy and reform issues to several departments in the government of Canada, and to the governments of New Zealand, Australia and several Canadian provinces. He was co-vice chair of the Ontario Fair Tax Commission and has been on several advisory committees for the Auditor General of Canada and Revenue Canada.

In 2002, Brooks was awarded the Canadian Association of Law Teacher’s Award for Academic Excellence.

He is a frequent speaker and public commentator on current public finance issues, and over the past few years, he has participated in capacity-building projects relating to taxation in a number of low-income countries, including Lithuania, Vietnam, China, Mongolia, South Africa, Bangladesh, Ghana, Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka and Botswana.

In previous years, three other Osgoode professors – the late Tim Edgar, Scott Wilkie and Jinyan Li – have received the Lifetime Contribution Award, demonstrating the strength of the law school’s tax faculty.

Indigenous Environmental Justice Project announces launch of videos

Indigenous Environmental Justice (IEJ) Project announces launch of videos
Indigenous Environmental Justice (IEJ) Project announces launch of videos

The Indigenous Environmental Justice Project (IEJ) at York University has been working collaboratively with Osgoode Hall Law School and the Faculty of Environmental Studies to develop knowledge and engagement on environmental and Indigenous justice and injustice.

Indigenous Environmental Justice (IEJ) Project announces launch of videos
A still from the Taking Action video

During this process, which began in May 2016, the project has created four video vignettes that include contributions from and collaboration with Indigenous activists, youth, artists, grandmothers and elders who shared their stories and experiences with the project.

The four videos are: Why IEJ Matters; Understanding IEJ; What is Environmental Injustice; and Taking Action. The videos were designed to be a resource for students, community members, activists and scholars, with the goal of working toward creating a better understanding of environmental justice as a concept that is grounded in Indigenous world views.

The videos aim to inform concepts of justice through the lived experiences of Indigenous people and create more conversations on how to move forward toward greater justice.

Participants in the project included: the Canada Research Chair Program, Osgoode Hall Law School, the Faculty of Environmental Studies, Deborah McGregor, Jason Jenkins, Nasreen Hussain, Meagan Dellavilla, Nicole Latulippe and Salisha Purushuttam.

About The Indigenous Environmental Justice Project

The Indigenous Environmental Justice Project is a five-year Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council-funded initiative based out of York University that aims to develop a distinctive EJ framework informed by Indigenous knowledge systems, laws, concepts of justice and the lived experiences of Indigenous Peoples.

Story developed by Nasreen Hussain, MES student and research assistant for IEJ

Osgoode Interim Dean Mary Condon named one of 100 top powerful women in Canada by WXN

Osgoode Hall Law School Interim Dean Mary Condon has been named one of this year’s top 100 most powerful women in Canada by the Women’s Executive Network (WXN).

Mary Condon
Mary Condon

Launched in 2003, the Canada’s Most Powerful Women: Top 100 Awards celebrate the incredible accomplishments of Canada’s top female executive talent as well as their organizations and networks. Condon was one of nine women selected in the PwC Public Sector Leaders category, which recognizes women who hold senior positions in Canada’s pubic sector organizations, and who are not currently in public office.

“For more than two decades, Professor Condon has been a visionary colleague, contributing to the leadership of Osgoode Hall Law School in Canada. We are grateful to her for undertaking the role as interim dean, where she has continued to demonstrate her commitment to advancing the school’s vision,” said Rhonda L. Lenton, president and vice-chancellor of York University. “This award is not only a testament of her dedication to Osgoode and York, but also to the bold path she has paved in the public sector. I wish her the very best for continued success.”

Condon joined the Osgoode Hall Law School faculty at York University in 1992. She served as associate dean (academic) from July 2016 to April 2018, and is currently appointed the dean (interim). Between 2008 and 2016, she was appointed by the Ontario government as a commissioner and board member of the Ontario Securities Commission (OSC). For three of those years (2011-14) she served as one of two full-time vice-chairs of the OSC. In that capacity she was executive sponsor of a number of policy initiatives. She also issued numerous adjudicative decisions as a member of the OSC’s tribunal. In early 2018, she was appointed a member of the board of the Capital Markets Authority Implementation Organization (CMAIO), an interim body set up to assist with the establishment of a Capital Markets Regulatory Authority for co-operating jurisdictions in Canada.

Condon teaches securities regulation and advanced securities in Osgoode’s JD program, and also directs and teaches in the professional LLM in Securities Law program. In the 2009 Winter term, she was awarded the Walter S. Owen Chair in Business Law at the Faculty of Law, University of British Columbia, where she was also the co-director of the National Centre for Business Law.

Her research interests are focused primarily on the regulation of securities markets, investment funds, online investing and pensions. She is co-author of Business Organizations: Practice, Theory and Emerging Challenges (with Robert Yalden, Janis Sarra, Paul Paton, Mark Gillen, Carol Liao, Michael Deturbide, Mohamed Khimji, Bradley Bryan and Gary Campo) and Securities Law in Canada: Cases and Commentary (with Anita Anand, Janis Sarra and Sarah Bradley), (3rd edition, 2017). She is the author of Making Disclosure: Ideas and Interests in Ontario Securities Regulation (UTP), and has also written articles, book chapters, and policy papers on topics related to securities regulation and pensions policy, and has given invited lectures on these topics in Canada and internationally.

Between 2014 and 2016, Condon served as a member of Canada’s National Steering Committee for Financial Literacy. She was a member of the Board of Trustees of the York University Pension Fund between 2005 and 2014.

Condon joins a prestigious community of past award winners, including Canada’s most iconic women trailblazers: Provost and Vice-President Academic Lisa Philipps; York President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton; Julia Foster, former Chair of the Board of Governors of York University; bestselling author Margaret Atwood; astronaut Roberta Bondar; Arlene Dickinson, chief executive officer, Venture Communications; Christine Magee, president, Sleep Country Canada; Michaëlle Jean, former governor general of Canada; Heather Reisman, founder and CEO of Indigo Books & Music; and York University alumna Kathleen Taylor, Chair of the board, Royal Bank of Canada.

The full list of winners is on WXN’s 2018 Canada’s Most Powerful Women website.

About the Women’s Executive Network (WXN)

WXN inspires smart women to lead. WXN creates and delivers innovative networking, mentoring, professional and personal development to inform, inspire, connect and recognize its community of more than 19,500 smart women and their organizations in the pursuit of excellence. WXN enables its partners and corporate members to become and to be recognized as employers of choice and leaders in the advancement of women.

Founded in 1997, WXN is Canada’s leading organization dedicated to the advancement and recognition of women in management, executive, professional and board roles. WXN is a founding member of the Canadian Board Diversity Council, dedicated to increasing the diversity of Canada’s corporate boards. In 2008, WXN launched in Ireland, followed by London, U.K., in 2015, creating an international community of female leaders.

IP Osgoode researchers join York University’s Artificial Intelligence and Society task force

computer plays chess with a human

IP Osgoode’s founder and director, Professor Pina D’Agostino, along with Aviv Gaon and Ian Stedman, both of whom are PhD Candidates at Osgoode Hall Law School, are members of York University’s Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Society Task Force. D’Agostino, Gaon and Stedman are leading scholars in AI and the law.

The task force, sponsored by the Vice-President Academic and Provost, and the Vice-President Research and Innovation, will develop ideas and examine options for building and featuring York’s research strengths in the area of Artificial Intelligence.

This taskforce, co-chaired by D’Agostino and Lassonde School of Engineering and Faculty of Health Professor James Elder, will leverage collegial expertise, solicit advice and generate recommendations towards how York University can advance research and take advantage of research, scholarship and academic opportunities in this area.

As an independent and authoritative voice, which explores legal governance issues at the intersection of intellectual property and technology, the IP Osgoode team is looking forward to working closely with the task force to help develop AI scholarship, research and academic programs.

Following up on the huge success of IP Osgoode’s Bracing for Impact: The Artificial Intelligence Challenge event, members of IP Osgoode will be organizing another conference focused on AI and data governance in March 2019. For more information, visit iposgoode.ca for announcements of upcoming AI related events, blogs and initiatives.