The Law Commission of Ontario Workshop – Approaches to Law Reform explores “law reform” as a distinct field of legal expertise, advocacy, and strategy. Each class is led by one or more expert practitioners experienced in developing and directing different approaches to law reform. Students will work with the practitioners and course instructors from the Law Commission of Ontario (LCO) to develop their own concrete, sophisticated, and actionable law reform proposal.
Students are free to develop their own law reform proposal. For example, a proposal may address:
Politicization of Ontario’s process for appointing judges
Platform misogyny and youth safety online
Platform influencer and content creator rights and obligations
Regulating “deep fake” images, audio and video used to harass, extort, defame, etc. development of the students’ law reform proposal.
Students who complete the course will gain a practical, hands-on understanding of how:
“Law reform” engages a sophisticated mix of social, political, economic, and legal considerations, as well as community coalition building, media messaging, and others.
Lobbyists and political staff participate in law reform and are regulated.
Government ministries and the legislature develop laws, respond to test case litigation, and respond to court-ordered law reform.
Cutting-edge law reform is happening in Indigenous law and in response to artificial intelligence.
Think tanks, non-governmental organizations, single-issue proponents, and public interest advocates engage politicians with “early signals” and the need for law reform.
Coroner’s Inquests and Commissions of Inquiry contribute to law reform.
Method of Evaluation: 20% Law Reform Proposal Outline, 10% Op-Ed Reflection Piece, 10% Legislative Drafting Exercise. 40% Issues, Options and Action Plan Paper, 20% Presentation and Q&A of Law Reform Proposal