To Look and to Play: A Space for Research on Children and Law – A Roundtable
You are invited to the To Look and to Play/Regards et jeux online roundtable event, organized by Professors Jean Frédéric Ménard (Sherbrooke) and Shauna Van Praagh (¿´Æ¬ÊÓƵ).
The roundtable is a space at which eleven law student authors – selected over the past academic year to research and draft a supervised paper with a meaningful connection to children, youth and law – present and share their work with each other, and with members of the VOICE (Views on Interdisciplinary Childhood Ethics) community and beyond.
The event showcases and encourages transdisciplinary, youth-focused research, writing and discussion, as it enriches the knowledge and research expertise of both students and scholars. We look forward to welcoming you to the first To Look and to Play/Regards et jeux Roundtable! To confirm your presence and obtain the Zoom link, email 2look-2play.law [at] mcgill.ca.
Program
Panel 1: Children in and Beyond Their Families
- Arnela Kovac: La non-admissibilité à la RAMQ pour les enfants issus de parents au statut migratoire précaire
- Camille Cardenas Benoit: L’aide médicale à mourir et les mineurs : une question d’âge ou de maturité?
- Claire Lawrence: Children Self-Advocating in Legal Proceedings: How Children Can Advance their Interests and Rights in Divorce and Gender Transition
- Andrew Clubine: Playing Nicely: Navigating tensions about children's rights and obligations at the intersection of civil law and canon law
Panel 2: Responsibilities to Protect Children – Health and Education
- Anaïs de Yparraguirre: L’aide médicale à mourir pour les mineurs
- Ji Eun Lee: Legally Protecting Children from Video Games
- D.J. Tokiwa: The Return to Ontario Elementary Schools: Surveying the Responsibilities of Teachers, Principals, and Students Amidst COVID-19
Panel 3: Children’s Interests and Identities in the World
- Arsalan Ahmed: Navigating eSports Law in Canada
- Juliette Mestre: Impacts of Youth-Led Climate Litigation In and Out of the Courtroom
- Kayla Maria Rolland: Ticking Time Bombs or Victims First? Children in the Former Islamic State
- Stephanie Belmer: Losing the Private Self: Cyberspace and Children’s Privacy
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