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Advisory Board

Deepa Mattoo
Executive Director, Barbra Schlifer Commemorative Clinic
Deepa is Executive Director at the Barbra Schlifer Commemorative Clinic. Before joining the Schlifer Clinic, Deepa was Project Co-ordinator, Staff Lawyer and Executive Director at the South Asian Legal Clinic of Ontario. In her role at the Schlifer Clinic, Deepa oversees the Clinic's strategic direction and provides leadership to the legal, counselling and interpretation services. Also, Deepa is directly involved in three critical projects related to the criminalization of women and the risk assessment of gender-based violence. Deepa is an Adjunct and Visiting Faculty at the University of Toronto's Faculty of Law. In 2017, Deepa was appointed Adjunct Professor at Osgoode Hall Law School for her role as the Co-Director of the Feminist Advocacy Program, hosted at the Schlifer Clinic. Deepa was the Law Foundation of Ontario's 2017 Community Leadership in Justice Fellow at Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work at the University of Toronto. She has trained thousands of service providers for best practices and legal education to work with forced marriage survivors, racialized non-status women, and immigration law clients in the context of gender-based violence. Deepa has appeared before parliamentary committees and commissions on a wide range of social justice and human rights issues and has represented hundreds of clients at multiple tribunals and courts in numerous jurisdictions.

Elizabeth Grace
Partner, Lerners LLP
Elizabeth Grace is a partner of the law firm Lerners LLP, where she has practiced civil litigation since her call to the Ontario bar in 1995. She has a diverse practice that includes work in the areas of sexual abuse and institutional liability. She is co-author of the book Civil Liability for Sexual Abuse and Violence in Canada (Butterworths, 2000), and has authored many publications and been a speaker on a variety of topics relevant to sexualized misconduct. Elizabeth was part of the working group that drafted the Law Society of Ontario’s Guide for the Provision of Legal Services in Cases Involving Claims of Sexual Abuse (adopted by Convocation in 2012). She co-presented a submission to the Ontario Legislature’s Select Committee on Sexual Violence and Harassment in May 2015 entitled “Returning Ontario to the Forefront of the Effort to Eradicate Sexual Violence and Harassment” that proposed legislative reforms. She was a plenary speaker at the “It’s Never Okay” 2015 Summit on Sexual Violence and Harassment in Toronto sponsored by the Ontario Wynne government. In 2014, she was recognized as one of the Top 25 Most Influential Lawyers by the Canadian Lawyer Magazine. Since 2016, she has been selected by her peers, on an annual basis, for inclusion in The Best Lawyer in Canada for Personal Injury Litigation. Elizabeth is presently serving a term as a member of the Board of Governors of the Law Commission of Ontario (2018 to 2021).

Jennifer Koshan
Professor of Law, University of Calgary Faculty of Law
Jennifer Koshan is a Professor in the Faculty of Law and Research Excellence Chair in Gender-Based Violence at the University of Calgary. Her research and teaching focus on equality, human rights, and legal responses to gender-based violence. With several colleagues, Professor Koshan recently completed a project funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council on Domestic Violence and Access to Justice Across Multiple Legal Systems. She serves on the Advisory Board of the National Association of Women and the Law’s Violence Against Women working group, and regularly works with NAWL, the Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund (LEAF), and National Judicial Institute on equality rights and gender-based violence litigation, law reform, and professional education.

Melisa Marsman
Assistant Professor of Law, Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University
Melisa Marsman graduated from the Schulich School of Law in 2005, was called to the Bar in 2006, and has since practiced law in Nova Scotia in a variety of business law areas as a private practitioner as well as in-house legal counsel.

Naiomi Metallic
Associate Professor of Law; Chancellor's Chair in Aboriginal Law and Policy, Aboriginal Law Certificate Coordinator, Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University
Naiomi is from the Listuguj Mi’gmaq First Nation in Gespe’gewa’gi. Naiomi W. Metallic is an Assistant Professor at the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University, where she holds the Chancellor’s Chair in Aboriginal Law and Policy. She holds a BA (Dalhousie), an LLB (Dalhousie), an LLL (Ottawa) and an LLM (Osgoode). She was also a law clerk to the Hon. Michel Bastarache of the Supreme Court of Canada in 2006-2007. Naiomi has published and presented on such topics as Aboriginal rights, Indian Act by-laws, essential services in First Nations communities and the linguistic rights of Indigenous peoples. Shestill continues to practice law with Burchells LLP in Halifax (where she practised for nearly a decade before joining the law school, primarily in the firm’s Aboriginal law group). She has been named to the Best Lawyer in Canada® list in Aboriginal law since 2015 and was chosen for Canadian Lawyers’ Magazine 2018 Top 25 Most Influential Lawyers in the area of Human Rights, Advocacy and Criminal law. As a legal scholar, she is most interested in writing about how the law can be harnessed to promote the well-being and self-determination of Indigenous peoples in Canada.

Robert Wright
Executive Director at The Peoples' Counselling Clinic & Executive Director African Nova Scotian Justice Institute
Robert Seymour Wright is a Social Worker and Sociologist whose 29 year career has spanned the fields of education, child welfare, forensic mental health, trauma, sexual violence, and cultural competence. A “clinician/academic/administrator,” he has always integrated his work delivering direct practice clinical service to clients with teaching and supervising interns, and promoting lasting systemic change through social policy advocacy. He also consults, trains, speaks and comments on a wide range of issues. His extensive pro bono work gave birth to The Peoples' Counselling Clinic, a non-profit mental health clinic. His pioneering work with colleagues in cultural competence and conducting cultural assessments has received national attention.

Samuel Singer
Associate Professor, University of Ottawa
Samuel Singer is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law at the University of Ottawa. Professor Singer's research interests focus on tax administration and dispute resolution, the regulation of non-profits and charities, and critical tax theory. He is also a scholar and advocate on trans legal issues and frequently presents his research to members of the legal profession.

Sharon Cowan
Professor of Feminist and Queer Legal Studies
Professor Sharon Cowan completed an LLB (Hons) from Strathclyde University, and an MPhil in Criminology from the University of Cambridge. She undertook two years as a researcher at the London School of Economics before going on to complete a PhD at Brunel University, London. Sharon was a lecturer at the University of Warwick for three years prior to her arrival at Edinburgh. She joined the University of Edinburgh in 2004. Her research interests include: Gender, Sexuality and the Law; Feminist Legal Theory; Criminal Law; Criminal Justice; Asylum studies. Recent projects include a national empirical project, along with Helen Baillot of the Scottish Refugee Council, and Vanessa Munro of the University of Nottingham, funded by the Nuffield Foundation, looking at the the way in which women asylum claimaints whose applications are based on a claim of rape, are treated by the Asylum and Immigration Appeal Tribunal. Sharon is presently working on a comparative socio-legal project looking at the impact of law on transgender people. Along with Dr Chloe Kennedy (Edinburgh) and Professor Munro (Warwick), she is a co-editor of the new Scottish Feminist Judgments Project @ScottishFemJP. Sharon sits on the editorial boards of the following journals: Social and Legal Studies, and Law and Society Review. She is an external reviewer for Irish Research Council, and is also a member of the Advisory Board for the UK based projects: The Future of Legal Gender (FLaG) (@FutureGender); and CILIA-LGBTQI+ (https://www.surrey.ac.uk/centre-research-ageing-gender/cilia-lgbtq-study).

Val Napoleon
Law Foundation Chair of Aboriginal Justice and Governance, Faculty of Law University of Victoria
Val Napoleon is the Law Foundation Chair of Aboriginal Justice and Governance, the Director of the JID/JD (Dual Indigenous and Common Law Degree Program) and the Indigenous Law Research Unit (https://ilru.ca/) and the Provost’s Engaged Community Scholar in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria. She is also an Indigenous People’s Counsel with the Indigenous Bar Association. Val’s current research focuses on Indigenous legal traditions, legal theories, feminisms, citizenship, self-determination, and governance. Several of her major initiatives include establishing and directing the Indigenous Law Research Unit, and developing and directing the JID (dual JD and indigenous law degree) program launched in September 2018. She works with numerous Indigenous community partners across Canada on a range of Indigenous law research projects (e.g., Indigenous water law, harms and injuries, gender in Indigenous law, and lands and resources) and also with several national and international Indigenous law research initiatives. Some of the courses she teaches are Indigenous feminist legal studies, Gitxsan land law, property and transsystemic property, Indigenous legal theories, and Indigenous legal methodologies. Val is from Saulteau First Nation (BC Treaty 8) and is an adopted member of the House of Luuxhon, Ganada, from Gitanyow (northern Gitxsan).
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