Dr. Teleiai Lalotoa Mulitalo Seumanutafa undertook a short-term visiting fellowship at the University of Queensland funded mainly by the Legitimus Project. The purpose of the visit was to convert her PhD thesis: “The consequences of legal pluralism for law reform in the South Pacific” into a book, which was published in 2018. Dr. Mulitalo returned to the University of Queensland in 2017 to launch a related work: “Legislative Drafting in the Pacific Context.” At the launch, she performed a traditional dance in Samoan dress.
In collaboration with the Commission on Legal Pluralism and the Human Rights Research and Education Centre, the Canada Research Chair on Legal Diversity and Indigenous Peoples co-organizes an international conference on legal pluralism at Ottawa University.
The conference: “Citizenship, Legal Pluralism and Governance in the Age of Globalization” will be held at Fauteux Hall (57 Louis-Pasteur, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) from August 22 to 24, 2018.
Many of the Legitimus members will be pannelists at this event. In fact, two of the panels will be exclusively dedicated to the Legitimus Group, in which Ghislain Otis, Val Napoleon, Pierrot Ross-Tremblay, Hadley Friedland, Jennifer Corrin, Mylène Jaccoud, Sébastien Grammond and Christiane Guay will participate.
They will present the result of research work conducted on the Legitimus project directed by Canada Research Chair on Legal Diversity and Indigenous Peoples.
For more information regarding this conference, go to http://commission-on-legal-pluralism.com/nl/home.
The Volume 48, no. 1 from Revue générale de droit is almost entirely dedicated to researchers from project Legitimus: “The State and Indigenous Legal Cultures: Law in Search of Legitimacy”.
After a brief introduction, Ghislain Otis writes: “La production du droit autochtone: comportement, commandement, enseignement “. Followed by a collaborative article from Mylène Jaccoud, Marie-Ève Sylvestre, Anne Founier, Christian Coocoo, Marie-André Denis-Boileau and Marie-Claude Barbeau-Leduc titled : “ Le pluralisme juridique en contexte atikemekw nehirowisiw dans le secteur pénal et la protection de la jeunesse “. Sébastien Grammond and Christiane Guay publish : “ L’interaction entre le droit innu et le droit québécois de l’adoption “. The next article: “Porcupine and Other Stories: Legal Relations in Secwépencúlecw “ is from Hadley Friedland, Bonnie Leonard, Jessica Asch and Kelly Mortimer. The last piece : “ De facto, non de jure ou De facto, hoc de jure? Incursions dans la pratique de l’interaction entre le droit étatique et le droit coutumier rom en Roumanie “ is written by the co-investigator from the Romania project, Sergiu Mişcoiu and Laura Maria Herţa.
These articles are the result of research work conducted on the Legitimus project directed by Canada Research Chair on Legal Diversity and Indigenous Peoples.
Raphaël Mapou, a researcher from the Pacific team of the Legitimus Group, defended his doctoral thesis in the presence his thesis director, François Féral, a member of the Legitimus group as well. Amongst the jury was Géraldine Giraudeau from the Université de Perpignan Via Domitia, Tamatoa Bambridge from the University of Polynesia and Ghislain Otis from the University of Ottawa.
Ms. Anne-Lise Madinier will receive the medal from Barreau de Paris for her research in law. Her doctoral thesis entitled: « Le droit positif en Nouvelle-Calédonie face à la revendication autochtone » was written under the supervision of Professor Ghislain Otis (University of Ottawa) and Professor François François Féral (University of Perpignan Via Domitia). The thesis was carried out as part of the work of the Pacific team working in New Caledonia.