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Episode 41: How Do Our Brains Process Information? Part I − With Host Caroline Mandell

In this first episode of a new three-part series on how the brain works, host Caroline Mandell is speaking with UNSW Sydney’s Emeritus Professor John Sweller. Together, they explore a fundamental question: how do our brains process, retain, retrieve, and apply information? In short: how do we learn?

Episode 41 (En anglais): How Do Our Brains Process Information? Part I − With Host Caroline Mandell

In this first episode of a new three-part series on how the brain works, host Caroline Mandell is speaking with UNSW Sydney’s Emeritus Professor John Sweller. Together, they explore a fundamental question: how do our brains process, retain, retrieve, and apply information? In short: how do we learn?

2021 | Conférence annuelle sur les peuples autochtones et le droit

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Videos and webinars from CIAJ’s 2019 Annual Conference on « The Impact of AI and Social Media on Legal Institutions. »

Meet our Board of Directors: Patrick A. Molinari, Ad. E., FRSC

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CIAJ would like to warmly thank its board members for sharing their skills and working to improve the justice system with heart and wisdom for the benefit of society as a whole.

Épisode 18 : Les agressions sexuelles, quatrième partie

Mythes, biais, aveux et prévention. Dernier d’une série de quatre épisodes portant sur la lutte contre les agressions sexuelles. Avec la chercheure Tamsin Higgs, professeure adjointe au Département de psychologie de l’Université de Montréal et Samuel Girard, candidat à la maîtrise et détenteur d’un baccalauréat en neuroscience cognitive.

Épisode 18 (in French): Les agressions sexuelles, quatrième partie

Mythes, biais, aveux et prévention. Dernier d’une série de quatre épisodes portant sur la lutte contre les agressions sexuelles. Avec la chercheure Tamsin Higgs, professeure adjointe au Département de psychologie de l’Université de Montréal et Samuel Girard, candidat à la maîtrise et détenteur d’un baccalauréat en neuroscience cognitive.

2022 Annual Conference: The Right to Dignity in Canadian Law

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CIAJ’s 46th Annual Conference will discuss dignity as a fundamental human right, including its role in statutory interpretation. A particular focus of the conference will be on child protection, incarceration, elder law, and end of life issues.
• Participation in this program is approved under Section 41 (1) of the Judges Act.
• Accredited in provinces where CLE requirements for lawyers are mandatory.
• Bilingual program with simultaneous interpretation.

Which Rights? Whose Voices?

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If we are truly to value our diversity and see it as a strength at a time when we need as much wisdom as we can find, we must be willing to embrace others and not simply be tolerant. Tolerance and sympathy are not the same as empathy and respecting each other as equals.

Jurisdiction Over Well-Being and Back-to-School Measures

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In the summer, I was awarded the Christine Huglo Robertson Award for an essay on Indigenous communities’ responses to emergencies and COVID-19. An earlier blog post explored issues of data sovereignty and public health management. This blog post will look at aid and how communities decided to handle the new school year. In May, the […]

Data Sovereignty and COVID-19

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Back in March, the world was learning to cope with ever-changing restrictions on daily life. I tried to focus on passing my fourth semester of law school but could not help tuning in to daily press briefings by the Prime Minister, provincial premiers, and territorial health officers. (I was following the situation in Nunavut, where […]