University of Victoria Faculty of Law | |
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Motto | "Let there be light" & "A multitude of the wise is the health of the world" |
Established | 1975 |
School type | Public |
Parent endowment | $140.7 million |
Dean | Susan Breau |
Location | Victoria, British Columbia, Canada 48°27′54″N123°18′59″W / 48.4650°N 123.3164°W |
Enrollment | 375 [1] |
Faculty | 62 |
Website | www.law.uvic.ca |
The University of Victoria Faculty of Law is a law school at the University of Victoria in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. The school grants JD, JID, LLM, and PhD degrees in law.
University rankings | |
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Global rankings | |
Canadian rankings |
The school was consistently ranked as one of the top law schools in Canada by Canadian Lawyer Magazine's Report Card on Canadian Law Schools before the magazine reformed the report card to cease ranking schools, being ranked #1 in Canada for the years 2001, 2002, 2003, and 2005. [2] Maclean's 2013 ranking of Canadian common law schools placed the school seventh out of 16.
About 105 students are enrolled each year. [3] The LSAT is required for admission to the school. 55% of the students are women, [3] and 29% are visible minorities. [4]
Additionally, the UVic Law School was also behind the first run of the Akitsiraq Law School, the only law school program to operate in Nunavut. The program involved University of Victoria professors spending rotating semesters in Iqaluit to teach a full curriculum of law school classes. The first run of the program graduated 11 Inuit lawyers in 2005, significantly increasing the number of lawyers in Nunavut. [5]
The Environmental Law Centre, created in 1995, provides legal information and assistance to local, provincial and national environmental groups including the Sierra Legal Defence Fund, the David Suzuki Foundation, the West Coast Environmental Law and Probe International. [6] On account of its focus on environmental law and sustainability issues, UVic Law was ranked by Corporate Knights magazine as the second-best law school in Canada in terms of its integration of environmental and social issues into the law school experience. [7]
UVic Law has a significant focus on Indigenous law programming and attracting Indigenous students. There is an endowed Professorship in Aboriginal Justice and Governance at the law school as well as a National Chair in Aboriginal Economic Development that the law school shares with the business school. There is a special admission category for Aboriginal students. At the beginning of every year, students are invited to a four-day event called Aboriginal Cultural Awareness Camp where students spend time at a nearby reserve learning about that particular aboriginal community as well as broader legal issues involving aboriginal persons in Canada. [8] [9]
The University of Victoria Faculty of Law is the only common law school in Canada to offer a co-op education program. The program allows students to alternate between terms on work placements and scholastic terms after completing their first year. Students in the co-op program have two required work terms; students are encouraged to have one placement in each of a private firm, government, and a public interest organization or administrative tribunal. Students are also encouraged to take work placements outside of British Columbia and a number of regular placements are available in places including France, Thailand, Mongolia, Canada's north, and Africa. Although every student who applies to the co-op program has been offered admission in recent years, there is a lottery for who gets to be admitted in time for the summer after first year. [10]
Following a multi-year effort spearheaded by John Borrows and Val Napoleon, the Faculty became the first law school in Canada to offer a program which integrates a study of the Canadian common law and of indigenous legal traditions. The Joint Juris Doctor and Juris Indigenarum Doctor (JD/JID) program admitted its first cohort in the fall of 2018. [11] [12]
The University of Victoria Faculty of Law runs a unique clinical program, called The Law Centre. [13] This program allows students to put their legal skills to work by providing a wide range of legal services to low-income persons in the Victoria area. Unlike most clinics at Canadian law schools, students at The Law Centre are required to obtain temporary articles from the Law Society, and can thus provide full representation for a number of matters. Law Centre students regularly appear in court for criminal sentencing hearings, family matters, criminal and civil trials, and so on. They also regularly appear before administrative tribunals such as the Human Rights Tribunal.
The following combined degree programs are offered:
Students manage a remarkable range of organizations and activities at the Faculty of Law. Activities include free legal clinics such as the on-site Legal Information Clinic, the Business Law Clinic, and the Law Centre located in downtown Victoria, [15] mooting, Appeal: The Law Journal of the University of Victoria, and interest oriented clubs. The umbrella organization for JD students at the Faculty of Law is the Law Students' Society. [16] The student society acts as a student government, providing funding to student organizations and advocating on behalf of students to the faculty and administration.
The University of Victoria (UVic) is a public research university located in the municipalities of Oak Bay and Saanich, British Columbia, Canada. Established in 1903 as Victoria College, the institution was initially an affiliated college of McGill University until 1915. From 1921 to 1963, it functioned as an affiliate of the University of British Columbia. In 1963, the institution was reorganized into an independent university.
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