Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ”

Fellows and Grantees

Learn about current projects that the RGHL's graduate and post-doctoral fellows, affiliated graduate members and grant recipientsÌęare currently working on.

Current graduate and postdoctoral fellows are funded through an FRQSC bursary dispensed by the research group.


RGHL Graduate and Post-DoctoralÌęFellows, and Affiliated Graduate Members

Current


MĂ©lisandre Charbonneau-Gravel- LLM Candidate

MĂ©lisande Charbonneau-Gravel is a member of the Barreau duÌęQuĂ©bec and the Law Society of Ontario, and a former law clerk to Justice Sheilah L.ÌęMartin of the Supreme Court of Canada. She is interested in constitutional and human rights law as well as in exploring the relationship between constitutional structures and disability rights.Ìę

Preliminary Thesis Title:ÌęThe Impact of Federalism and Intergovernmental Agreements on the Rights of People With Disabilities in Canada: Study of the Jurisdiction over Health.Ìę


Dimitri Patrinos - DCL Candidate

Dimitri is a member of the Law Society of Ontario and a graduate of the University of Montreal (LL.B., 2018; J.D., 2019) and Concordia University (B.Sc., 2013). Dimitri is interested in exploring medical liability related to the use of novel technologies in health care.

Preliminary Thesis Title: Physician Negligence for Wrongful Birth and Wrongful Life


Stefano Buzi - PhD Candidate, Visiting Graduate Student

Stefano is a visiting PhD student from the Law Department at the Univerity of Brescia, under the supervision of professor Simona Cacace. Their research project on 'Artificial intelligence and care relationship: integration and regulation' aims at developing a protocol/guidelines for a human-rughts consistent application of AI inside medical practice. The research will be developed under the scope of biolaw and private law.


Vibhuti Dikshit - LLM Candidate

VibhutiÌęis an advocate practising in India. She is interested in exploring the intersection of law and morality.

Preliminary Thesis Title: A comparative analysis of the law on surrogacy in India and Canada


Maushumi Bhattacharjee - DCL CandidateMaushumi

Maushumi Bhattacharjee is a Doctor of Civil Law candidate at the Faculty of Law at Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ”. She holds an LL.M in Bioethics from Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ”, an LL.M in Intellectual Property Law from Gujarat National Law University, and a Bachelor’s in Business Administration and Law from Institute of Law, Nirma University. Maushumi’s research aims to address the limitations and negative impacts of intellectual property (IP) laws on innovation in healthcare. Her research proposes looking beyond IP laws and instead drawing from feminist ethics and ethics of care theories to develop a new theory of law for innovation in healthcare. Emphasizing on collaboration, shared responsibility, solidarity, and caring relations, her research aims to create a legal framework that is more ethical, equitable, and sustainable.

Preliminary Thesis Title: Towards aÌęCaringÌęLaw for Innovation in Healthcare


Lingqiao Song – DCL CandidateLingqiao Song

Lingqiao Song acquired a BSc in Biology and two Masters of Law at the Chinese Academy of Social Science and University of Montreal, where she was awarded the “Dean’s Award: Best Overall Academic Achievement.” In 2016, she was admitted to Chinese Bar Association.

Lingqiao is also a member of the Institutional Review Board of the Faculty of Medicine at Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ” and an assistant to the Data Access Officer of the ICGC.

Preliminary Thesis Title: The Legal Comparative Study of Genetic Privacy Laws in the US and China


Past LLM Fellows

MarĂ­a RodrĂ­guez- LLM CandidateMaria Rodriguez

MarĂ­a RodrĂ­guez is a human rights lawyer with extensive experience working in international human rights litigation and advocacy both at the Universal System of Human Rights and the Inter-American System of Human Rights. She is particularly interested in the protection of women, girls and persons with reproductive capacities’ fundamental rights to health, autonomy and integrity in the context of structural systems of violence, exclusion, and discrimination. MarĂ­a is a member of the Barreau du QuĂ©bec and is a graduated from McGill’s Faculty of Law (B.C.L / LL.B, ‘16).

Thesis:


Dimitri Patrinos - LLM Candidate

Dimitri is a member of the Law Society of Ontario and a graduate of the University of Montreal (LL.B., 2018; J.D., 2019) and Concordia University (B.Sc., 2013). Dimitri is interested in exploring medical liability related to the use of novel technologies in health care.

Thesis Title: Remote Patient Monitoring and Physician Liability


Maushumi Bhattacharjee -ÌęLLM CandidateMaushumi

Maushumi isÌęam a law graduate from India, with an LL.M in Intellectual Property Laws from Gujarat National Law University. Working in a pharma company in India has given herÌęimmense knowledge onÌęlegal contracts for clinical trials, clinical studies including contracts with ethics committees, and has also given herÌęextensive experience in working with the legalities of expanded and fast-growing clinical research activities in a developing country. She is interested inÌęresearching the barriers to access to healthcare resources in developing countries and LMICs caused by the existing framework of intellectual property laws.Ìę

Thesis Title:ÌęA (Bio)ethical Intellectual Property Framework for Vaccine


Kristina KĂ©kesi-Lafrance – LLM CandidateKristina KĂ©kesi-Lafrance

Kristina KĂ©kesi-Lafrance is a master’s student specializing in bioethics. She is interested in how laws and ethics interact, particularly in the context of human genetics.

Kristina holds a bachelor of civil law from Sherbrooke University and has been a member of the Quebec Bar since July 2018. Before starting her master degree at Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ”, Kristina practiced as a lawyer in a national firm for a year.


Michael Lang – LLM Candidate

Michael Lang is a member of the Law Society of Ontario and a graduate of Ïăœ¶ÊÓƔ’s Faculty of Law (BCL/LLB, 2018) and of the University of Alberta (BA, 2014). Michael is broadly interested in the ways technology is changing healthcare, how the law understands personhood, and how humans interact with the natural environment.

Thesis: Explaining the Unexplainable: Medical Decision-Making, AI, and a Right to Explanation.


John Petrella – LLM Candidate

John Petrella practiced civil litigation, with a focus on medical negligence cases, and regulatory law, focusing on the regulation of health professionals. These experiences, along with his undergraduate and graduate experience in the health sciences, peaked his interest in investigating the ways in which expert evidence is utilized in Canadian health law and exploring ways to facilitate greater access to justice and just outcomes in health law cases.

Thesis: Playing Doctor: Judging Judges' Analyses of Medical Expert Evidence in Canadian Medical Malpractice Lawsuits.


Sara Hartmann – LLM CandidateSara Hartmann

Hailing from Luxembourg and Germany, Sara Hartmann is an masters (thesis) candidate pursuing the bioethics specialization.

She graduated from Université Panthéon-Assas Paris 2 and from Université Jean Moulin Lyon 3. She also has an American LLM degree from Indiana University Maurer School of Law. Regarding her research, she is interested in the transformation of civil law in an era of scientific advances.

Thesis: The impact of bioethical advice in legal frameworks: a comparative study of guidance by national bioethics committees.


Louise Holm – LLM CandidateLouise Holm

Louise Holm is a master's student at Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ”'s Faculty of Law, pursuing the degree at the Institute of Air and Space Law. She also holds a LLB and LLM degree from the University of Aarhus, Denmark, where her thesis focused on the exploration and exploitation of mineral resources in the international seabed.

Ms. Holm will conduct research within both space law and health law, combining the two in her final thesis, which is expected to be finalized in the summer of 2020. The one defining trait of her legal interests is that of public international law in all its forms.


Similoluwa Ayoola – LLM CandidateSimiloluwa Ayoola

Similoluwa Ayoola is a human rights lawyer and advocate. She has participated in notable litigations through the entire rung of the Nigerian court hierarchy. For a number of years, she has contributed to the movement for the inclusion of the right to food as a legal and constitutional right under Nigerian laws.

She is currently an master's candidate and O’Brien Fellow at the Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism, Faculty of Law, Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ”, where she researches the tradeoffs between the international legal framework for the right to food and climate change.


Estefanía Fierro Valle – LLM Candidate

“Euthanasia in Ecuador: How to make it happen. A legal and ethical approach”

Estefanía Fierro Valle is a LLM (Bioethics) candidate at McGill’s Faculty of Law. She graduated in law from the Universidad San Francisco de Quito, and holds a Bachelor in Civil Law. She also studied EU Competition Law in King’s College London. Her interests lie at the intersection of law and health, particularly relating to patient’s rights, public health policy and medical liability. Estefania provided advice to clients in numerous proceedings with the antitrust authority in Ecuador on abuse of power cases, restrictive agreements, and pre-merger notifications in the pharmaceutical and insurance industries.


Florence Ashley – LLM with Thesis ProgramFlorence PagĂ©

“Saving Trans Lives with a Prescription Pad: The Normative Landscape of Prescribing Hormone Replacement Therapy to Trans Patients by Family Physicians”
Florence Ashley Paré is a LL.M. candidate at the McGill Faculty of Law where they are exploring the bioethical and legal frameworks for prescribing hormone replacement therapy to trans patients. They conduct trans/feminist activism on the unceded lands of Tiohtià:ke (Montreal), and frequently publish op-eds and give conference presentations on a wide range of issues faced by trans people. Their academic work has been published on the McGill Journal of Law and Health and is forthcoming in the University of Toronto Law Journal. Aside from their membership of the McGill Research Group on Health & Law, they are also O'Brien Fellow in Human Rights and Legal Pluralism for 2017-2018.


Patrick Garon-Sayegh, BCL/LLB'10, LLM'17 (Bioethics) — 2015-2016 Fellow

Medicine’s Empire: Professional Law and the Organization of Quebec’s Healthcare System Since 1973

Dßplomé du programme B.C.L./LL.B. de la Faculté de droit de l'Université McGill, Me Garon-Sayegh a pratiqué au sein du cabinet Millet Thomson en droit administratif, municipal, de la construction, et en droit environnemental de 2011 à 2015. Il entame présentement un LLM en bioéthique à l'Université McGill, s'intéressant aux interactions du droit administratif, du droit professionnel et de l'éthique avec les politiques publiques.

His research project examines professional law’s role in shaping Quebec’s healthcare system, particularly since the enactment of the Professional Code and related legislation at the end of the “Quiet Revolution”. It focuses on the central —and dominant— role of the medical profession within the system and how professional law sanctions this role, often to the detriment of other healthcare professions and options.


Daniel Widrig, LLM'14 — 2013-2014 FellowDaniel Widrig

“Appropriateness/Proportionality in health care decision-making”

A few decades ago, we as a humanity did not always have the luxury of boundless medical opportunities.Today, where science is so far, we seem to reach other limitations, mainly financial restrictions.

This leads to the question: When is the burden for society too high to finance one individual’s treatment?

The research project approaches this question by comparing current Canadian and Swiss law while continuously reflecting it through the lens of bioethics.


Keith Lenton, LLM'16 — 2012-2013 FellowKeith Lenton

“Authenticating Treatment Refusal in the Context of Mental Illness: When is it Appropriate to Respect Versus Overrule Treatment Decisions?"

I am doing a survey, analysis and critique of the mental health treatment regimes within Canada and other jurisdictions, to the extent that they are constituted by the law, in order to determine when it is ethically permissible to overrule treatment decisions when mental illness is an influencing but not overriding factor.


Past DCL Fellows

JosĂ©ane ChrĂ©tien – DCL CandidateÌęJoseane Chretien

Joséane Chrétien is a doctoral candidate interested in health law and ethical issues. She holds a master degree in comparative and European Law from the University of Oxford and a master degree from the University de Montréal. She has been a member of the Québec Bar since 2003 and worked as a litigator for over a decade.

Her research project, titledÌęLegal Chronicles of Utopia: Regulatory Framework of Human Enhancement in a Post-Darwinian Era, focuses on the legal and ethical issues surrounding human enhancement (genetic engineering, preimplantation diagnostic, performance-enhancing drugs, anti-aging medicine, etc.), particularly in terms of fundamental rights and human dignity.


Stefanie Carsley – DCL CandidateStefanie Carsley

Stefanie Carsley is a doctoral candidate at Ïăœ¶ÊÓƔ’s Faculty of Law, studying Canadian legal responses to assisted reproductive technologies. Her dissertation draws on qualitative interviews with Canadian fertility lawyers to comment on the strengths and shortcomings of Canadian laws pertaining to surrogate motherhood.

Her work has been published in the University of British Columbia Law Review, the Canadian Journal of Family Law, the Health Law Review, the Dalhousie Law Journal and is forthcoming in the Canadian Bar Review. Her doctoral research is supported by the Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarship and the Queen’s Fellowship from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.


Salman Shahad, DCL candidate — 2015-2016 Fellow

Rationing of health care through contractualization: the responsibility of provincial legislatures in preserving fairness in personalized care

Shahad Salman is a lawyer, a member of the Quebec Bar, and an academic associate at the Genomics and Policy Center (CGP) at Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ”. She graduated in law from the University of Montreal, and holds a juris doctor in common law. She also studied international law in Europe at the International Institute of Comparative Law of University of San Sandiego. Me Salman also holds a master of Laws from Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ”.

Her thesis aims to explore the responsibility of the provincial governments in preserving the fundamental principles of the Canadian health care system, particularly preventing unfair prioritization of patients while simultaneously favouring the acceleration of personalized medical innovation.


Lee Black, DCL'17 — 2013-2014 FellowLee Black

"Legal Pluralism in the Medical Profession in the United States: Harmonious Coexistence?"

The medical profession in the United States is faced with government regulation at both the state and federal level, dictating many aspects of medical practice.

However, the profession has a long and continuing history of self-regulation, ranging from practice and education standards to peer review to ethical standards. How do these two authorities—the profession and the state—interact and coexist to influence the behaviour of physicians? What are the tensions between the two that impact the effective practice of medicine?


Ma'n H. Zawati, DCL candidate — 2012-2013 FellowMa'n Zawati

"Physicians’ Legal Duty to Inform in Large-Scale Population Genomic Projects: Reciprocity as a Complement to the Respect for Autonomy"

Genomic Research in general and population genomic studies in particular are challenging the traditional legal duties of clinician-researchers. More specifically, this project focuses on the legal duty to inform and assesses the challenges facing the traditional interpretation of the principle of respect for autonomy.


Past Postdoctoral Fellows

Diya Uberoi - Postdoctoral Fellow

Diya Uberoi is a postdoctoral fellow with the Research Group on Health Law, where her research focuses on the role rights-based strategies play in promoting more equitable health outcomes. She has a background in international human rights law and has worked with different international organizations. She holds a PhD in International Law from the Graduate Institute for International and Development Studies, an LLM in Global Health Law from Georgetown University Law Center, a JD from Emory University School of Law, and an MPhil in Psychology from the University of Cambridge.


Mary Bartram – Postdoctoral Fellow

Mary Bartram has extensive experience in mental health and addictions policy development with federal and territorial governments, indigenous organizations and NGOs, including as the Director of the Mental Health Strategy for the Mental Health Commission of Canada.Mary Bartram

As a McGill postdoctoral fellow, her research focuses on the potential for harm reduction to bridge different understandings of recovery in the mental health and addictions sectors.

She completed her PhD at the School of Public Policy and Administration at Carleton University in 2017, with doctoral research on equity in access to psychotherapy in Canada, Australia and the UK.


Agnieszka Doll – Postdoctoral Fellow

Agnieszka Doll  Agnieszka is an interdisciplinary scholar trained in law, sociology, and gender studies.

Her PhD at the Law and Society Program at the Faculty of Law, University of Victoria (2017) incorporated ethnographic research on the organization of involuntary psychiatric admission and legal aid lawyering that is undertaken within it. More broadly, Agnieszka is interested in intersections between legal practice, professional knowledges, and institutional processes in medico-legal spaces and their implications for vulnerable populations.

As postdoctoral fellow, she is pursuing a project exploring the interface between standardized and generalized modes of institutional functioning in legal and psychiatric settings and a textual representation of experiences of women undergoing psychiatric admission.


Kathleen Hammond – Postdoctoral Fellow

Katie HammondKatie is a postdoctoral fellow with the Research Group on Health and Law and visiting scholar with the Petrie-Flom Center at Harvard Law School.

She has been involved with policy development in the area of reproduction for organizations, including the World Health Organization. Katie completed her PhD at the University of Cambridge where she was a Gates Cambridge Scholar, during which she explored the market and regulation of assisted reproductive technologies in Canada.

She is interested in questions surrounding medical markets for gametes, embryos, and surrogacy, and their regulation. Her postdoctoral project will explore fertility clinic policies surrounding consent for social egg freezing and the disposition of preserved eggs.


Michael Da SilvaMichael Da Silva – Banting Postdoctoral Fellow

Michael Da Silva is a Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Banting Postdoctoral Fellow in the Faculty of Law and Institute for Health and Social Policy at Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ”.

Michael completed his doctorate in the University of Toronto Faculty of Law, where he was a CIHR Vanier Canada Graduate Scholar.

His numerous publications include works in health law, ethics, and philosophy of law


Portrait: Heather WhitesideOther Past Fellows

Heather Whiteside – 2017-2018 BCL/LLB Fellow

Heather Whiteside is a second-year student at McGill’s Faculty of Law. Her interests lie at the intersection of law and health, particularly relating to sexual and reproductive rights, medical liability, and disability law. She has explored these areas as a research intern at the McGill Institute for Health and Social Policy and through her work with the McGill Journal of Law and Health. Her work is financed by the Regroupement stratĂ©gique Droit, changements et gouvernance ()


Renzo MunitaRenzo M. Munita, Visiting Graduate Student — 2013-2014 Fellow

LicenciĂ© en Droit pour lÂŽUniversitĂ© Catholique de ConcepciĂłn et Avocat pour la Cour SuprĂȘme de Justice au Chili; Master en droit privĂ© de l'UniversitĂ© Pierre MendĂšs France - Grenoble 2 et Doctorat en droit privĂ© pour l'EDSJ de Grenoble, France; Professeur (en mission) de la Chaire de droit civil Ă  l'UniversitĂ© du Desarrollo au Chili.

Dans le cadre de sa thÚse de doctorat portant sur la responsabilité civile liée aux activités scientifiques et technologiques supervisée par le professeur Etienne VergÚs, M. Munita étudie le contentieux industriel, environnemental et sanitaire, particuliÚrement dans une lecture des risques et des incertitudes.

C’est dans le cadre de ces recherches de droit comparĂ©, qui incluront l’étude du droit canadien, qu’il fera un sĂ©jour Ă  la FacultĂ© de droit de l’UniversitĂ© McGill, sous la supervision de la professeure Lara Khoury.


Ya TanYa Tan — 2012-2013 Fellow

"The reform of assessment of medical malpractice in China"

Currently there is a tension in Chinese law due to conflicts regarding the application of the two assessment systems in medical malpractice: medical and judicial. With the promulgation in 2010 of the Chinese Tort Law, urgent improvements are needed in the future. Through a comparison of Chinese medical malpractice laws with those of Canada, this project aspires to determine whether the dualism in Chinese law can persist, and what the future of Chinese law regarding medical malpractice will be.

Ìę

Ìę

Ìę

RGHL Travel Grant Recipents

Recent

Diya Uberoi - Postdoctoral fellow

Exploring factors influencing Civil society organizations’ use of rights based strategies to improve access to medicines was presented as poster presentation at the Consortium of Universities for Global Health Conference in Washington, DC (April 14-16, 2023).

Civil society organizations (CSOs), broadly defined as groups functioning outside the government (including NGOs, faith-based groups, unions etc.), are central to driving social change, including equitable access to health care and medicines. Key to their success is use of legal strategies, such as litigation, advocacy etc. that appeal to the protection of human rights. In India and South Africa, CSOs advocacy and litigation efforts helped lower medicine prices and saw corporations and governments embrace universal access policies. Because of the seemingly insurmountable scope of systemic human rights concerns, that rights based efforts unearth, CSOs routinely face government pushback. As a discipline, focused on the methods and strategies facilitating the uptake of evidence-based practices can bring relevant, untapped methodologies to understand how CSOs drive health reforms. This study drew upon implementation science frameworks, in particular, the consolidated framework for implementation research to identify key determinants impacting the uptake of CSOs rights-based strategies.

To learn more about applying for RGHL Travel Grants, click here.

Past

Mary Bartram, Postdoctoral fellowMary Bartram

Harm Reduction as a Bridge between Mental Health and Addiction Recovery, presented as part of a panel on 'Harm Reduction, Public Policy, and Moral Controversy: Principle and Practice' at the 4th edition of the International Conference on Public Policy, Montreal, June 26-28, 2019.

Recovery is a key concept driving system transformation in both the addiction and mental health sectors, with shared roots in advocacy a shared focus on hope in the face of stigma, self-determination, and meaningful lives. Nevertheless, while cure is not thought to be necessary for mental health recovery, addiction recovery generally starts with abstinence. This study draws on concept analysis and phenomenological methods to explore the potential for harm reduction to act as a bridge between the mental health and addiction sectors.


Kathleen Hammond, BCL/LLB CandidateKathleen Hammond

Katie Hammond presented two papers at the Canadian Sociological Association Conference in Vancouver, British Columbia on June 3-6, 2019.

Her first paper was entitled “Taking our Health into Our Own Hands: How Intended Mothers and Egg Donors are Changing the Laws and Policies Surrounding Assisted Reproduction in Canada.” It explored the ways that Canadian intended parents and egg donors have mobilized their collective power through online communities, and how they are prompting changes to medical guidelines and laws related to assisted reproduction. Her second paper “Relationally Speaking: The Implications for Women of Treating Embryos as Property in a Canadian Context” analyzed the recent ONSC and ONCA decisions of S.H. v D.H. and the implications of categorizing embryos as property.


Florence Ashley, LLM candidateFlorence Paré

“Torture Isn’t Therapy”: The Legality of Transgender Reparative Therapy, presented at the 3rd Biannual Conference of the European Association for Transgender Health, Rome, Italy, April 11-13, 2019.

Although a number of jurisdictions have since banned or attempted to ban reparative therapy, the overwhelming majority have no legislative measures in place that explicitly protect trans youth against therapies, which aim at changing their gender identities and make them align with the gender they were assigned at birth, despite WPATH considering such therapeutic approaches unethical.

Using a doctrinal and jurisprudential method that draws on notions of professional liability, disciplinary law, and the right to equality while situating them within of contemporary scientific knowledge and standards of practice, the presenter argues that laws of general application may be used to sanction the practice of reparative therapy by licensed professionals even in the absence of explicit prohibition.


Michael Lang​Michael Lang, BCL/LLB Candidate

On May 10–11, 2018, I attended “Rights in the Modern World,” a postgraduate law conference that took place at Durham University in Durham, United Kingdom. I presented on the tort of wrongful life, comparatively outlining how the tort has been considered in Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom. Finding the treatment of wrongful life cases to have been argumentatively unsatisfying, I defended the view that an expressive theory of the law of tort provides compelling grounds on which wrongful life cases might be taken seriously.


Matt Malone, BCL/LLB Candidate

Matt Malone presented a paper at the Western Anthropology Graduate Society’s annual conference, held March 9-10, 2018.

His paper (“The Property Discourse in Cases of Destroyed Cryopreserved Human Reproductive Material”) discussed recent trends extending the property law discourse to human biological materials, and examined the history of this discourse in the common law. His abstract and presentation won an award on the panel “Perceiving Biological Boundaries.”Ìę


Kathleen HammondKathleen Hammond, BCL/LLB Candidate

With the support of the RGHL, Katie presented a paper entitled ‘Canada’s online grey market in egg donation’ at the Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society annual meeting, taking place September 14-16, 2017, in Vancouver, Canada.

Summary of paper: Despite the ban on payment, it is widely known that Canadian intended parents and egg donors are buying and selling donor eggs in an online grey market, or are traveling to jurisdictions where payment is permitted. Through data from in-depth qualitative interviews I conducted with Canadian egg donors and intended parents, I explore donors’ and intended parents’ experiences of these markets. I argue that the ban on payment neither reflects or ameliorates the ethical concerns faced by egg donors and intended parents.


Sarah Berger Richardson, DCL candidateÌę

Portrait: Sarah Berger RichardsonMs Berger Richardson received the 2016-2017 RGHL Student Travel Grant to attend The Future of Food Law and Policy in Canada conference, taking place Nov 3-4, 2016, at the Shulich School of Law, Dalhousie University, in Halifax, and participate as a panelist on a discussion around ‘Food Safety: Between Governance & Choice.’

Summary of paper: Food safety regulations strengthen public confidence in our food supply, but deciding what constitutes an acceptable level of risk is a value judgment involving moral and political questions. It cannot be determined by science alone. And yet, contemporary food safety regulations purport to speak in universals about food quality while shifting attention away from the complex web of interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral interests that make up food systems including the environment, rural development, cultural heritage, animal welfare, and public health. Drawing on the scholarship of Alasdair MacIntyre, my paper suggests that a deeper understanding of theories of virtue can soften the current dichotomy between scientific and ethical perspectives in Canadian food law and policy.


Ayodele Akenroye, DCL candidate

Ayodele AkenroyeMr. Akenroye, doctoral candidate in the Faculty of Law who is working under the supervision of Professor Frédéric Mégret, received the 2012-2013 RGHL Student Travel Grant. Mr. Akenroye presented his research at the International Peacekeeping in Africa conference at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland, being held between November 22-24, 2012.

His presentation was entitled "Navigating the Complexity of HIV/AIDS in Peacekeeping Missions in Africa: Challenges and Prospects", and spoke to the role of peacekeeping missions in the spread and control of HIV/AIDS, the gender dimensions of HIV/AIDS within African peacekeeping missions, the human rights challenges posed by the testing of personnel for HIV, and gave an an overview of the steps taken by regional and international peacekeeping groups to tackle the complex challenges brought about by HIV/AIDS.

Back to top