Douglas McK. Brown Lecture
Previous D McK. Brown lecturers have been:
1986
Speaker: Professor Alice Erh-Soon Tay, University of Sydney
Topic: The Struggle for Law in China
Delivered Thursday, November 13, 1986
1988
Speaker: Professor Maurice Copithorne, University of British Columbia
Topic: Canada: Federation or Confederation?
Delivered Thursday, March 3, 1998
1990
Speaker: Professor Karl Klare, Northeastern University
Topic: Reinventing Democracy: Does Legal Theory Have a Role?
Delivered Tuesday, November 27, 1990
1991
Speaker: Professor Donald H. Berman
Topic: Artificial Intelligence and Law: Machines Thinking Like Lawyers
Delivered Tuesday, October 29, 1991
1993
Speaker: Professor Denise Réaume, University of Toronto
Topic: Justice Between Cultures: The Protection of Cultural Affiliation
Delivered Tuesday, November 9, 1993
1996
Speaker: Professor Roderick Macdonald, McGill University
Topic: Three Centuries of Constitution-Making in Canada: Will There be a Fourth?
Delivered Monday, March 11, 1996
Speaker: Professor Regina Graycar, University of New South Wales
Topic: Hoovering as a Hobby and Other Stories: Gendered Assessments of Personal Injury Damages
Delivered Thursday, November 7, 1996
1998
Speaker: Sir Peter North, Oxford University
Topic: Law Reform: Problems and Pitfalls
Delivered Wednesday, September 23, 1998
1999
Speaker: Professor Judy Fudge, Osgoode Hall Law School
Topic: New Wine into Old Bottles? Updating Legal Forms to Reflect Changing Employment Norms
Delivered Thursday, March 15, 1999
2001
Speaker: Chancellor Allan McEachern, Chancellor of University of British Columbia
Topic: The Role of The Courts In Contemporary Society
Delivered Wednesday November 7, 2001
2002
Speaker: Mr. Justice Allen M. Linden
Topic: Contribution of British Columbia to Canadian Tort Law
Delivered Wednesday, March 13, 2002
2003
Speaker: Professor Alfred de Zayas
Topic: The Status Of Guantánamo Bay And The Status Of The Detainees
Delivered Wednesday, November 19, 2003
2007
Speaker: Professor John Whyte, Saskatchewan Institute of Public Policy and the University of Regina
Topic: Text, Context and Narrative in the Search for Constitutional Meaning
Delivered Wednesday, March 14, 2007
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