樱花影视

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Law and Society (LLM)

Our master’s degree in law and society is an interdisciplinary thesis-based degree. You'll gain a broad understanding of Canadian, international and comparative dimensions of law. You’ll work closely with other students as you study legal theory and research methodology.

You will work closely with your supervisor as well as experts in other disciplines, such as political science or sociology. Your education will culminate in a thesis.

Expected length Project or thesis Course-based
1-2 years (3-6 academic terms) Yes No

Quick facts

Program options:
Master's
Study options:
Full-time study
Program delivery:
On-campus

Outcomes

Students in this program will:

  • develop an interdisciplinary specialization within the scope of their thesis project
  • apply appropriate discipline and project specific methods
  • gain skills to effectively communicate disciplinary knowledge to legal community and broader public

Find a supervisor

All graduate students must have a faculty member who serves as their academic supervisor. When you apply:

  • you must specify the faculty member(s) you would like to work with, and explain why
  • this faculty member does not need to agree to be your supervisor before you apply, but you can reach out to faculty member(s) to seek their interest in principle

Please review faculty profiles and their areas of graduate supervision to find someone whose supervision interests align with your research aspirations.

Alan Hanna

Associate Professor Indigenous legal orders, contract law, Aboriginal law, Indigenous governance and jurisdiction, Indigenous rights and title.

Accepting graduate students

Andrew Newcombe

Associate Dean, Academic and Student Relations and Professor International arbitration, international investment law, international economic law

Andrew Luesley

Assistant Professor Contracts, remedies, blockchain and crypto commerce, business and company law, consumer protection, and access to justice.聽

Asad Kiyani

Associate Professor Race and criminal law, police powers, international criminal law, Third World approaches to international law, legal pluralism, postcolonial theory, critical race theory, citizenship

Accepting graduate students

Bradley Bryan

Associate Professor Taxation law, Indigenous taxation, Indigenous corporate structures, legal theories engaging postcolonial and critical race theory

Accepting graduate students

Chris Tollefson

Professor Environmental and climate law, criminal law and procedure, joint governance and decision-making (Indigenous-Crown), forestry law, contaminated sites

Accepting graduate students

Christopher Heslinga

Director of the Law Centre and Assistant Teaching Professor Clinical legal education, poverty law, human rights law, residential tenancy law, employment law, administrative law

Colin Macleod

Professor Jurisprudence, children's rights, moral and political philosophy, theories of justice

Accepting graduate students

Darcy Lindberg

Assistant Professor Indigenous legal orders, Cree law and governance, constitutional law, ecological governance and Indigenous law, treaties and Indigenous law.

Accepting graduate students

David Milward

Professor Criminal law, evidence, Indigenous law, Indigenous justice

Accepting graduate students

Deborah Curran

Professor Environmental law, water law, water governance, municipal and land use law, natural resources, regulatory design

Accepting graduate students

Elizabeth Adjin-Tettey

Professor Torts, remedies, insurance, critical race and feminist theories

Estair Van Wagner

Associate Professor Property, natural resources, housing and homelessness, Aboriginal law, Indigenous rights

Accepting graduate students

Freya Kodar

Dean of Law Income security, disability and the law, debtor & creditor relations, torts, pensions, consumer law

Accepting graduate students

Funmilola Ayotunde

Assistant Professor Natural resources development, business and human rights, international environmental law and international human rights law

Accepting graduate students

Geoffrey Loomer

Associate Professor Tax law, tax policy, individual income tax, corporate income tax, international tax

Accepting graduate students

Gillian Calder

Professor Constitutional law and theories, family law, feminist legal theories, critical legal and arts-based pedagogies, legal education, performance theories, law and theatre, queering law, law and emotions.

Accepting graduate students

Janna Promislow

Associate Professor

Accepting graduate students

John Borrows

Professor Constitutional law, Indigenous law, natural resources law, comparative constitutionalism, Aboriginal and Treaty Rights, and law and religion

Kathryn Chan

Professor Not-for-profit law, law and religion, constitutional law

Accepting graduate students

Maneesha Deckha

Professor and Lansdowne Chair Animal law and ethics, feminist jurisprudence, administrative law, rule of law, socio-legal analysis

Accepting graduate students

Mark Gillen

Professor Securities regulation, business associations, trusts, tax, competition law, and historical foundations of the common law

Accepting graduate students

Mary Anne Vallianatos

Assistant Professor Canadian legal history, Asian Canadian history, critical race studies

Accepting graduate students

Michelle Lawrence

Professor & Director, Access to Justice Centre for Excellence Criminal law, evidence law, access to justice

Accepting graduate students

Patricia Cochran

Associate Dean, Administration and Research, and Associate Professor Constitutional law, theories of judgement, democracy and legality, multijuralism, law and humanities

Pooja Parmar

Associate Professor, President鈥檚 Chair in Law and Indigeneity in a Global Context Legal pluralism, legal history, legal ethics, Indigeneity, international human rights law, research methodology

Accepting graduate students

Rebecca Johnson

Professor Business associations, legal theory, law and film, criminal law, law and popular culture, Indigenous legal research, legal pedagogy, legal method, gender.

Accepting graduate students

Robert Lapper

Professor, David and Dorothy Lam Chair in Law and Public Policy Public law, access to justice, aboriginal law, alternate dispute resolution, professional regulation.

Robert Howell

Professor Intellectual property, cultural property, technology, telecommunications, private international law (conflict of laws), and Asia-Pacific issues.

Accepting graduate students

Sara Ramshaw

Professor Arts-based approaches to law; law and the humanities; family law; feminist/intersectional legal theory; improvisation and the law; music and the law; critical legal studies; critical contract law; and poststructural legal theory.

Accepting graduate students

Sarah Morales

Associate Dean Indigenous & Director, JD/JID Program, and Associate Professor Torts, transsystemic torts, Coast Salish law and languages, legal research and writing and field schools

Accepting graduate students

Tim Richards

Associate Teaching Professor Legal skills, administrative law, social welfare law, children and the law

Tracey Lindberg

Professor

Accepting graduate students

Val Napoleon

Professor Indigenous legal traditions and methodologies (e.g., land, water, governance and democracy, gender and human rights, and families), Indigenous legal theories, Indigenous feminisms, legal pluralism, Indigenous democracies, and Indigenous intellectual property. In the JD/JID, she teaches common law property combined with Gitxsan land and property.

Accepting graduate students

Victor V. Ramraj

Professor of Law, Chair in Asia-Pacific Legal Relations Comparative constitutional law, comparative administrative law, transnational law, law and society in Southeast Asia, emergency powers, law and complexity

Accepting graduate students

Program details

Providing you accurate admission requirements, application deadlines, tuition fee estimates and scholarships depends on your situation. Tell us about yourself:

Program details

This information assumes you are . If this is incorrect, please update your information.

Application deadlines

September entry – apply by December 10
September entry – apply by December 10

Admission requirements

Program specific requirements

Please note that the minimum language requirements for the Faculty of Law admissions are higher than the minimums set by the 樱花影视. 

As part of your application, you must submit:

  • A curriculum vitae.
  • A thesis proposal (two-page maximum). You can revise this proposal during your time in the program to accommodate your areas of interest.
  • The names and email addresses of two references. Your references should be professors or another authority familiar with your academic work.

Program specific requirements

Please note that the minimum language requirements for the Faculty of Law admissions are higher than the minimums set by the 樱花影视. 

As part of your application, you must submit:

  • A curriculum vitae.
  • A thesis proposal (two-page maximum). You can revise this proposal during your time in the program to accommodate your areas of interest.
  • The names and email addresses of two references. Your references should be professors or another authority familiar with your academic work.

Completion requirements

View the minimum course requirements for this program.
View the minimum course requirements for this program.

Funding & aid

Tuition & fees

Estimated minimum program cost*

* Based on an average program length. For a per term fee breakdown view the tuition fee estimator.

Estimated values determined by the tuition fee estimator shall not be binding to the 樱花影视.

Ready to apply?

You can start your online application to UVic by creating a new profile or using an existing one.

Apply now 聽 聽How to apply

Faculties & departments

Need help?

Contact Tiffany Gordon at gradlawadm@uvic.ca or 250-721-8913.

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