Call for Participants in a Reading Group & Roundtable at CALT 2023 Conference: The Comparative Value of Online and In-person Legal Education
This reading group and roundtable will give legal educators space to consider and compare the value of online versus in-person legal education, and imagine how to move forward to a "new normal" that can hopefully better reflect some of the lessons learned about different teaching modalities during the pandemic.
Participants will be invited to read three articles relevant to the topic prior to the roundtable. Each of these readings will be briefly summarized at the start of the session, and participants will then be guided through a series of discussion questions on the roundtable's theme.
Call for Participants in a Roundtable at CALT 2023 Conference: Teaching Critical Approaches to Criminal Law
Profs Sarah-jane Nussbaum (UNB) and Danardo Jones (Windsor) are convening a Roundtable for CALT at Congress 2023 (see link for dates and details of the Conference) about teaching critical perspectives in criminal law, and are reaching out for expressions of interest in joining.
The focus here is on teaching law school first years, and early career teachers are especially welcome.
- Roundtable participants are asked to bring something for the group conversation, for instance:
- More granular descriptions of teaching goals/learning outcomes in terms of "critical perspectives", or a definition of "critical perspectives" that you are using in designing your course
- A description of specific challenges (or perceived failures) in bringing critical perspectives to students, reflections on the reasons for the problem including perhaps how it relates to other courses, classroom dynamics, etc.
- A particular class or teaching unit which worked well including perhaps material, focus, activities, and evaluation methods to share with the group.
- Evidence of how an approach is received by students (good or bad)
Please reach out to Profs Nussbaum and Jones by December 20 if interested ([email protected], [email protected]) so that they can add your name to the proposal they plan to submit. Your email should include some indication of what you would like to bring to the Roundtable.
There is space available for a number of people to join - invite your colleagues to consider it. At the Conference, people not actually part of the Roundtable will of course be able to attend the session.
2023 Call for Proposals
Find the call in french / Appel en francais.
CALL FOR PROPOSALS
Annual Meeting 2023
Deadline for proposals December 23 2022.
Submit proposals using this form
The Canadian Association of Law Teachers first in-person meeting since the Summer of 2019 will be at York University in Toronto as part of the 2023 Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences (May 27 to June 3 2023).
CALT’s meetings will be on Monday May 29 and Tuesday May 30 2022.
The CALT Banquet and awards will be held concurrently with the Canadian Law and Society Association on the evening of Sunday May 28th, 2022, the night before our meetings begin.
On Monday May 29 CALT will host a Luncheon for Junior Professors - all of those appointed to their first full time tenure track position in or after the month of January 2020.
Congress 2023 is an important moment to come together and attempt to re/connect with our communities. We are particularly focused on the way our communities have both grown and changed since our last meeting, and of issues left on the table when we canceled our 2020 conference. The Congress theme, Reckonings and Re-Imaginings has particular resonance in that light and will be somewhat familiar to Canadian scholars and learners of law:
The third decade of the twenty-first century has brought us into unprecedented times. An unrelenting global pandemic, protests for racial justice, and escalating climate disasters have heightened our awareness of the urgent need for collective action to help us create a more equitable and sustainable world. The lessons from Black Lives Matter, Idle No More, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and the Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, have been joined by new lessons, new reckonings about what is needed to live in non-hierarchical relationships that can truly honour our human differences, while protecting the land, water and air we all need to live together.
In the theme, “Reckonings and Re-Imaginings,” we invite the Congress community to pause and reflect on the lessons we have learned, but also to begin the work of imagining and enacting the terms under which we might create a radically different world. What might it mean for us to commit to knowing and caring for each other across our differences, understanding that the world we want to live in tomorrow is dependent on the action we take together today? Can we re-imagine a new set of social relationships grounded in decoloniality, anti-racism, justice, and preservation of the earth? This invitation for both reflection and action requires a genuine investment in the project of learning and growing, a willingness to participate in active and meaningful co-engagement, and a commitment to exercising patience and care in doing the hard work of changing belief systems and the world.”
See more at the Congress main site here.
AN EXPANDED FOCUS
In putting together our program, we are proposing two particular areas of attention in addressing the themes above:
- We would like to pay particular attention to the work and needs of those members of the academy who have joined in the last 3 or 4 years (along with programming aimed at graduate students in law);
- We are looking to make more space for discussions of scholarly legal research inside or across areas of legal scholarship - beyond the scholarship of teaching and learning.
These plans complement our familiar focus on teaching and learning law in Canada.
PROPOSALS
We encourage the submission of complete or partial (with space for more participants) proposals for sessions of 1.5hrs or 1 hour. We are open to a variety of formats and themes, as set out below and we encourage you to reach out to colleagues at different institutions and career stages to generate possibilities.
Participants should assume that remote participation—for presenters and audiences—will not be supported at this conference. All participants should plan to attend the conference in person. If you have questions or concerns please be in touch at [email protected].
Form (all sessions slots are 1.5 hours – you may request a 1 hour session) |
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Substantive Themes related to Reckonings & Reimaginings (feel free to identify more than one) |
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i. Workshops (participatory workshops led by one or more people) |
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a. Topics which relate to or engage with Indigenous and / or Black communities and law or legal education |
ii. Roundtables (large number of speakers or expectation that all participate) |
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b. Post Pandemic Reckonings and Reimaginings |
iii. Panels (3-4 speakers presenting research work, with or without drafts and commentators) |
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c. Teaching and Learning in Legal Education |
iv. Author meets Reader |
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d. Focus on scholarship about a particular issue. |
v. Another format |
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e. Focus on scholarship in a particular subject area. |
By the time of the conference, all participants must be registered as members of CALT and registered for Congress. We would be delighted if you chose to become a member now: please visit https://www.acpd-calt.org/join_adhesion.
The requirement of membership does not include JD students or community members who may be participating in your proposal. Please contact us directly in that case at [email protected] or indicate that people in this position are a part of your proposal.
Submit proposals using this form.
https://forms.gle/MXiYF2XsPutQcRt97
Our Deadline is December 23 2022 but we will begin reviewing proposals on November 23 2022.
Questions should be directed to contact@acpd-calt.org
We also anticipate a role in arranging ‘CALT-sponsored” Open Sessions (available to all Congress attendees). These should closely relate to the theme-related sessions and so invite suggestions for sessions or speakers and expressions of interest in co-arranging specific sessions. Limited funding may be available to support non-academics in travel and attendance in relation to these open sessions where applicable. Creative proposals are welcome.
CALT may award a “Congress Graduate Student Merit Award” worth approximately $500 to one graduate student who is presenting their work at our meetings. Only students who are presenting work which can be described through an abstract of 250 words will be able to apply for this award. The award recipient will be notified by May 2023, and funds will be disbursed in June 2023. If you or someone participating in your proposed session is interested in this opportunity please indicate using the box available in the submission form.
CALT members participating at Congress may also be eligible to receive a “Child and Dependent Care Subsidy” (up to 200 per person) via the Federation of Social Sciences and the Humanities. An application is required, and decisions about this subsidy will be released on May 2 2023. Information about this opportunity will be distributed to all who are on the program in late March 2023.