Roundtables are informal events in which a small group of invited scholars discusses recent research or historically important scholarship. The purpose of the roundtable is to to provide feedback to scholars on their work and to broaden the knowledge of the group. Grégoire Webber of the London School of Economics will be discussing his new book,
The Negotiable Constitution: On the Limitation of Rights
(Cambridge University Press, 2010). Participants include: Professor Mark Antaki, McGill University Faculty of Law
The Roundtable discussed "Human Rights Obligations in the Private Sector: Reflections on YL v Birmingham City Council and the Meaning of Public Function", a paper written by Professor Paul Rishworth, Dean of the University of Auckland Faculty of Law, and Professor Janet McLean of Dundee University.Professor Paul Rishworth, Dean of the University of Auckland Faculty of Law.
Roundtables 2010
May 14, The Negotiable Constitution
Professor Dennis Baker, University of Guelph
Professor Michael Milde, University of Western Ontario Philosophy Department
Professor Peter Oliver, University of Ottawa Faculty of Law
Professor Wil Waluchow, McMaster University
February 11, A Comparative Perspective on Federalism
Explanatory Power and Constitutional Interpretation
The Roundtable discussed a paper by Professor Nick Aroney, University of Queensland Faculty of Law, entitled "Explanatory Power and Constitutional Interpretation".
January 21, The Horizontality of Rights
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