Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Peter A. Allard School of Law

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Type
  
Public Law School

Dean
  
Catherine Dauvergne

Province
  
British Columbia

Students
  
600 (2013)

Phone
  
+1 604-822-3151

Peter A. Allard School of Law

Motto
  
Latin: Fiat justitia ruat coelum

Motto in English
  
Let justice be done though the heavens fall

Location
  
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Address
  
1822 East Mall,, Allard Hall, UBC, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1, Canada

Hours
  
Open today · 8AM–10PMMonday8AM–10PMTuesday8AM–10PMWednesday8AM–10PMThursday8AM–10PMFriday8AM–10PMSaturday8AM–10PMSunday8AM–10PMSuggest an edit

Notable alumni
  
Lance Finch, Wally Oppal, Ujjal Dosanjh, Jody Wilson‑Raybould, Ed Fast

Similar
  
University of British Columbia, Osgoode Hall Law School, University of Victoria Faculty of, Western Law School, Robson Hall

Profiles

Peter a allard school of law faculty naming announcement


The Peter A. Allard School of Law is the law school of the University of British Columbia. It offers a three-year Juris Doctor (JD) program and the graduate degrees of Master of Laws (LLM), Master of Laws Common Law (LLMCL) and doctorate (PhD) degrees. Among other things, the faculty has courses emphasizing Pacific Rim issues, business law, tax law, environmental and natural resource law, indigenous law, and feminist law. It was renamed from the University of British Columbia Faculty of Law in 2015 to honor a $30M gift from Peter Allard, an alumnus, which followed a 2011 gift from him of about $12M.

Contents

Peter a allard school of law faculty naming announcement at norman mckenzie house


History

UBC offered lectures in law from 1920, but the university's faculty of law was established in 1945, and was served by George F. Curtis (1906-2005) as the founding dean until he retired in 1971. Because it lacked adequate infrastructure, the law school used army huts from World War II until a permanent structure was built in 1951, which was named after Curtis. It was replaced by Allard Hall in 2009. In recognition of a donation from UBC law alumnus Peter A. Allard, the law school was renamed the Peter A. Allard School of Law on January 22, 2015; it had been known as the "University of British Columbia Faculty of Law".

Academics

The school was ranked 3rd in Canada and 31st in the world in the 2016 QS World University Rankings of law schools. It was fifth among Canadian law schools in Maclean's 2013 rankings.

Allard Hall

The school is located at the University of British Columbia's campus near Vancouver, British Columbia. In 2011 it moved out of its former building, a brutalist-style building with malfunctioning heating and cooling and into a new building that had recently been completed. The building cost around $56M; the university used $21M of its own funds and the rest came from donations, including $12M from The Law Foundation of B.C. In 2011 shortly before students and faculty began moving in, Peter Allard, an alumnus, donated about $12 million to the school, with about $10M of it going to complete the capital campaign; the building was named after him.

Allard Prize for International Integrity

The Allard Prize was established in 2012 and was initially funded by part of the 2011 gift from Allard and further funded by a subsequent $30M donation by Allard in 2015.

The first prize was awarded in 2013, and it is given biennially to an individual, movement or organization that has "demonstrated exceptional courage and leadership in combating corruption, especially through promoting transparency, accountability and the Rule of Law". It is one of the world's largest prizes dedicated to the fight against corruption and protecting human rights.

The winner receives CAD$100,000 and an Allard Prize award which is an original work of art; Honourable Mention recipients receive an Allard Prize award and may be awarded a cash amount at the discretion of the Allard Prize Committee.

Many Allard Prize nominees and recipients have been, and continue to be, subjected to threats, violence, imprisonment and other attacks associated with their anti-corruption and human rights activities. One Honourable Mention recipient (Sergei Magnitsky) was nominated posthumously after being tortured and dying in a Russian prison.

Publications

UBC Law Review

The University of British Columbia Law Review is the school's official law review and is published by the UBC Law Review Society. Similar to the Harvard Law Review, the editorial process and business of the Society is run by Juris Doctor students, while manuscripts submitted to the journal are peer-reviewed by professors with specialized knowledge of the subject matter. It was first published in 1949 as a collection of legal essays entitled the UBC Legal Notes. In 1959, it officially became the UBC Law Review. It was incorporated as a non-profit society in 1966. The UBC Law Review is a top ranking scholarly publication in Canada and globally, alongside the University of Toronto Law Journal and McGill Law Journal.

Table of Statutory Limitations

First published in 1955 as a section of the UBC Law Review, the Table of Statutory Limitations has since matured into an annual compendium of legal limitation periods of various statutes. The TSL is published by students at the school.

Annual Review of Insolvency Law

The only Canadian peer-reviewed journal dedicated to insolvency and bankruptcy law. This annual publication offers articles by scholars and practitioners on personal and commercial insolvency law.

Canadian Journal of Family Law

First published in 1978, the Canadian Journal of Family Law is Canada's first family law journal. The journal is a biannual interdisciplinary journal that publishes both English and French academic articles on a broad range of issues related to family law. The journal is peer reviewed by an advisory board consisting of legal professionals and academics. It is produced by an editorial staff of students at the school.

Masks: The Online Journal of Law and Theatre

An interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal based at the school. The journal focuses on the intersections of Law and theatre.

UBC International Law Journal

The UBC International Law Journal is an online open access academic journal published by students at the school. The journal was initially created through the UBC International Law Society. The journal publishes exclusively student work, reviewed by students. The first issue was published in November 2008.

Legal Eye newspaper

The Legal Eye is a newspaper published monthly by students at the school. Started in September 2003, the Legal Eye serves as a forum for reporting on news about the Faculty, broader legal community, case commentary, the occasional recipe, book/restaurant/film reviews, event reviews, and for recognizing student activities and achievements.

Notable faculty

  • Beverley McLachlin PC, 1974–1981, became Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada in 2000.
  • Joel Bakan, author of The Corporation.
  • Notable alumni

  • Bud Smith QC, former Attorney General of BC.
  • Donald Brenner, former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia.
  • Kim Campbell, first woman Prime Minister of Canada
  • Joe Clark PC CC AOE, former Prime Minister of Canada unsuccessfully pursued first-year at Allard School of Law.
  • Lance Finch, Chief Justice of British Columbia.
  • Ted Lee, former diplomat and historian, former Governor of Canada to the International Atomic Energy Agency.
  • Thomas Martin Franck, international law scholar and NYU Law Professor Emeritus, former Editor-In-Chief of the American Journal of International Law.
  • Frank Iacobucci CC, former Supreme Court of Canada Justice and former Dean of the University of Toronto Faculty of Law.
  • Jody Wilson-Raybould Attorney General of Canada Minister of Justice
  • References

    Peter A. Allard School of Law Wikipedia