Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

UVic to build national Indigenous law centre

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Sep, 2020 08:05 PM
  • UVic to build national Indigenous law centre

The University of Victoria is expanding its law school building to house the new National Centre for Indigenous Laws.

The federal and B.C. governments and the Law Foundation of B.C. are contributing $27.1 million to fund the expansion that will become home to the world's first joint degree in Indigenous legal orders and Canadian common law.

Melanie Mark, B.C.'s minister of advanced education, says the school will train a generation of Indigenous legal scholars.

B.C. is contributing $13 million to the law school expansion, while the federal government will provide $9.1 million and the Law Foundation of B.C. will spend $5 million.

The 2,440-square-metre addition to the Anne and Murray Fraser Building at the university will use Coast Salish designs, signage and public art, and reflect the law school's long-standing relations with the Songhees and Esquimalt peoples in the Victoria area.

Prof. Val Napoleon says the school's expansion represents a justice sanctuary for Indigenous people.

University president Jamie Cassels says the Indigenous law school will play a vital role in reworking the legal fabric of Canada.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. boy killed as tree falls during hike

B.C. boy killed as tree falls during hike
A five-year-old boy has been killed in an accident involving a group of hikers on a walk east of Vancouver.

B.C. boy killed as tree falls during hike

Feds eye existing tools for post-CERB help

Feds eye existing tools for post-CERB help
The Liberals plan to use existing tools to quickly create a new support measure next month for struggling workers who won't qualify for employment insurance.

Feds eye existing tools for post-CERB help

Liberal MPs say they support prorogation

Liberal MPs say they support prorogation
Liberal MPs were surprised by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's decision to shut down Parliament Tuesday, but many say they believe it was the right call to hit the reset button and deliver a new throne speech, given how COVID-19 has changed the political and economic landscape.

Liberal MPs say they support prorogation

Federal government to join assessment of B.C. coal mine

Federal government to join assessment of B.C. coal mine
The federal government has announced it will join in an environmental assessment of a major expansion to a proposed southern British Columbia coal mine.

Federal government to join assessment of B.C. coal mine

Doctors brace for flu season during COVID-19

Doctors brace for flu season during COVID-19
The president of the Canadian Medical Association is warning that the collision of COVID-19 and cold and flu season could bring a new host of health-care challenges when the cold weather sets in.

Doctors brace for flu season during COVID-19

WATCH: "Trudeau Spineless" Said Conservative Andrew Scheer as Parliament is Prorogued

WATCH:
No confidence motion may trigger a Federal election in Canada.

WATCH: "Trudeau Spineless" Said Conservative Andrew Scheer as Parliament is Prorogued