In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • About the Contributors/Quelques mots sur nos collaboratrices

ELIZABETH ADJIN-TETTEY is an associate professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria. She holds a D. Jur degree from Osgoode Hall Law School. Her research interests include feminist and critical race analysis of law and judicial remedies. She teaches torts, remedies, insurance law, and race, ethnicity, culture and the law.

ROSEMARY AUCHMUTY is a professor of law at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. This article brings together her current research in gender and law (particularly in relation to property law, modern legal history, sexuality, and popular culture) and her long-standing interest in girls’ fiction. As well as many book chapters and articles in law journals, she has written two books on girls’ school stories, A World of Girls (London: Women’s Press, 1992) and A World of Women (London: Women’s Press, 1999).

NATASHA BAKHT (B.A., M.A., LL.B., LL.M.) is an assistant professor of law at the University of Ottawa. She teaches criminal law and multicultural rights. She was called to the Bar of Ontario in 2003 and then served as a law clerk to Justice Louise Arbour at the Supreme Court of Canada.

ANNA CARLINE is a lecturer in law at Liverpool John Moores University in the United Kingdom. Her research interests include feminist jurisprudence, queer theory, and feminist politics. Her research to date has drawn upon the work of Judith Butler in order to critically examine how the law constructs women and femininity.

ANGELA CAMERON (B.A., LL.B., LL.M., SSHRC doctoral fellow, and University of Victoria president’s scholar) is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria. Her areas of research and publication include restorative justice, criminal law, reproductive technologies law, property law, intimate violence, and feminist legal theory.

EMMA CUNLIFFE (LL.B., University of Melbourne; LL.M., University of British Columbia) is a Ph.D. candidate in the Faculty of Law at the University of British Columbia, where she also teaches evidence law. Emma’s research interests include fact determination in criminal cases, evidence law, feminist theory, and indigenous peoples’ experience with colonial law.

JENNIFER KOSHAN is an associate professor and graduate program coordinator in the Faculty of Law at the University of Calgary. Her research [End Page 217] and teaching interests are in the areas of constitutional law, human rights, violence against women, feminist legal theory, and public interest advocacy.

ZOE PEARSON is a lecturer in law at Keele University in the United Kingdom. Her research interests include critical theories of international law, the domestic implementation of international human rights norms, and the structures and processes of public international law, including the participation of transnational actors. Her current research focuses on pluralism and complexity in international legal regulation.

WANDA WIEGERS is an associate professor in the College of Law at the University of Saskatchewan. She teaches and writes in the areas of family law, violence against women, women and children’s rights, income security policy, and poverty and the law. [End Page 218]

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