While mainstream climate discourse often fails to center Indigenous perspectives on land and resource governance, critical Indigenous theory demonstrates that any truly 'just' transition must begin with Indigenous voices, sovereignty, and place-ba
On 1 November 2021, McGill's Faculty of Law launched the McGill Business Law Meter, a blog for timely commentary and discussion of current developments in Canadian and transnational business law. Under the editorial leadership of the inaugural holder of the Professorship of Business Law, Peer Zumbansen, McGill Law students engage with hot button issues in corporate and securities, labour and commercial law, investment law, international economic law and private international law. The Meter welcomes feedback and commentary as well as submissions from guest writers. Guest submissions and inquiries should be sent to: peer.zumbansen [at] mcgill.ca
While mainstream climate discourse often fails to center Indigenous perspectives on land and resource governance, critical Indigenous theory demonstrates that any truly 'just' transition must begin with Indigenous voices, sovereignty, and place-ba
As geopolitical tensions redraw the rules of global commerce, the traditional lawyer is becoming an endangered species, forcing a radical rethink of how we prepare the next generation of legal minds.
When Western sanctions collided with Russian courts, judges faced a stark dilemma: should geopolitics rewrite centuries‑old doctrines of force majeure?