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Law Homecoming: (Un)Common Law et civilités matinales - a great success!

Published: 20 October 2008

The Faculty of Law had a lot to celebrate at this year’s Homecoming Breakfast – including 10 years of transsystemic education and 40 years of common law teaching.

This October 17, Dean Nicholas Kasirer welcomed more than 80 esteemed alumni to the Law Faculty’s Common Room for the breakfast, in conjunction with other Ã山ǿ¼é Homecoming activities. Homecoming is the annual celebration where graduates are invited back to campus to reconnect with old friends and faculty members, and to mix and mingle with current students.

Kasirer was thrilled with the turnout – and says those in attendance felt the same: “So many graduates enjoyed telling me how they were impressed with the law students who attended as ‘ushers’ (at 8 a.m. no less!), and with seeing staff, old (c’est une façon de parler!) and new.â€

The theme of this year’s breakfast was “ (Un)Common Law et civilités matinales†to celebrate the unique aspects of Ã山ǿ¼é’s Law Faculty.

Not only is Ã山ǿ¼é’s the oldest law school in the country, but it was also the first to establish the transsystemic approach to legal education in 1999. Ã山ǿ¼é law students study in both French and English, and its graduates are able to practice in Canadian, US and UK common law systems as well as in Quebec’s civil law system.

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