Graduate Students

Lindsay Borrows

Lindsay Borrows

PhD Candidate
borrows@ualberta.ca

Research Interests

  • Indigenous law
  • Legal methods

Research Focus

Borrows’ thesis focuses on the ways in which Indigenous peoples’ own legal traditions provide sophisticated processes, principles and patterns of decision-making and dispute resolution, and on how colonization has systematically weakened the transmission and operation of these important laws. Her work examines different methods for how Indigenous legal traditions can be revitalized and applied in contemporary contexts.

Awards and Achievements

  • Appointed assistant professor at Queen’s University Faculty of Law
  • Recipient of a Law Society of British Columbia Graduate Fellowship

Kimberly Wasylenchuk

Kimberly Wasylenchuk

LLM Candidate
wasylenc@ualberta.ca

Research Interests

  • Alberta
  • Federalism
  • Constitutional law

Research Focus

The focus of Wasylenchuk’s research is on an assessment of recent federalism issues that have arisen involving Alberta. Her thesis aims to show that, in Alberta, federalism is political and not a legal issue.

Awards and Achievements

  • Recipient of the Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarship – Masters
  • Recipient of the Walter H. Johns Graduate Fellowship
  • Recipient of the Alberta Graduate Excellence Scholarship
  • Recipient of the Honourable ND McDermid Graduate Scholarship in Law
  • Published as a contributing author in the Alberta Law Review Energy Law Edition – Vol. 60 No. 2 for the paper “Hydrogen Roadmap: Policy, Regulation, and Prospect for Future Developments in Alberta” by Gavin Fitch, Michael Barbero, Kimberly Wasylenchuk

M.B. Rodriguez Ferrere

M.B. Rodriguez Ferrere

PhD Candidate
mbrodrig@ualberta.ca

Research Interests

  • Animals
  • Rule of Law
  • Enforcement

Research Focus

Rodriguez Ferrere’s research focuses on underenforcement of animal welfare legislation as a constitutional problem. He argues that structural deficiencies in the way animal protection laws are enforced means they undermine the rule of law, making it a problem all of us should worry about – not just those who have the interests of animals front of mind. He focuses on two case studies – Alberta and New Zealand – to show that a lack of resourcing and clear policy direction means that the law is routinely underenforced, and will attempt to provide clear routes for reform and improvement in the sector.

Awards and Achievements

  • Recipient of the Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Scholarship
  • Presented his work at the Canadian Animal Law Conference and Helsinki Animal Law Conference.

Prince Ogunlana

Prince Ogunlana

LLM Candidate

Research Interests

  • Artificial-Intelligence regulation
  • Artificial-Intelligence Africa
  • Artificial-Intelligence policy

Research Focus

Ogunlana’s research examines the legal frameworks for addressing artificial-intelligence-based tort feasance in Africa. It entails a functional comparative study of the treatment of the phenomenon in Nigeria, Kenya and South Africa.

Awards and Achievements

  • Recipient of the Foote Graduate Award in Law
  • Recipient of the Honourable ND McDermid Graduate Scholarship in Law

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Victor Olusegun

LLM Candidate
volusegu@ualberta.ca

Research Interests

  • Insolvency
  • Corporate restructuring

Research Focus

Olusegun’s thesis seeks to examine the current framework of the Companies Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) and its effectiveness in restructuring financially distressed entities. It will also involve a comparative study between the restructuring framework in the CCAA and Administration in the United Kingdom.

Awards and Achievements

  • Recipient of the Alberta Graduate Excellence Scholarship
  • Recipient of the Honourable ND McDermid Graduate Scholarship in Law