BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//132.216.98.100//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.20.4// BEGIN:VEVENT UID:20260531T215954EDT-5331hKU2Xf@132.216.98.100 DTSTAMP:20260601T015954Z DESCRIPTION:Cliquez sur les deux icônes ci-dessus pour les agrandir et déco uvrir davantage de nos intervenants.\n\nVeuillez vous inscrire à cet événe ment en envoyant chrlp.law [at] mcgill.ca (un e-mail au Centre ici). Veuil lez également noter que toutes les présentations se dérouleront en anglais .\n\nCet événement est coparrainé par le Centre sur les droits de la perso nne et le pluralisme juridique et la Commission du droit du Canada.\n\n\nL es cas de mariages forcés (MF) au Canada touchent toutes les confessions\, origines ethniques et origines raciales\, et remontent à la création de l a Confédération. Leur prévalence a attiré l’attention du public en 2008 à la suite de plusieurs affaires très médiatisées et du travail de plaidoyer mené par la South Asian Legal Clinic of Ontario. En 2015\, le Canada a re groupé les mariages forcés\, la polygamie et les soi-disant « crimes d’hon neur » dans le cadre de la Loi sur la tolérance zéro face aux pratiques cu lturelles barbares. Cette loi a ajouté de nouvelles infractions pénales au Code criminel\, notamment le mariage forcé\, le mariage avant l’âge de 16 ans\, ainsi que le fait de célébrer un mariage en sachant qu’il est « con traire à la loi fédérale ». Outre les modifications portant principalement sur les sanctions pénales et le contrôle de l'immigration\, la Loi sur le mariage civil a également été modifiée afin de fixer\, pour la première f ois\, un âge minimum national pour le mariage (16 ans) et d'introduire l'e xigence légale du « consentement libre et éclairé de deux personnes à se p rendre mutuellement pour époux ».\n\nLa loi de 2015 s'inscrivait dans une série de lois qui ont marqué le virage du Canada vers la « crimigration »\ , à l'instar d'autres pays au-dessus de la limite Nord. Non seulement le f ait d’attribuer la responsabilité de la MF\, de la polygamie ou des fémini cides à des facteurs extérieurs au pays est factuellement erroné\, mais ce la légitime une approche qui les traite comme des « problèmes d’immigrés » et encourage des politiques qui\, soit se concentrent sur le contrôle des nouveaux arrivants\, soit ferment les yeux\, alors que les intérêts et le s besoins des survivantes ne sont pas au centre des préoccupations. En 201 8\, sous le gouvernement libéral\, la loi a perdu son titre controversé de « tolérance zéro »\, mais pour le reste\, elle est restée inchangée.\n\nU ne décennie plus tard\, l'intérêt du public pour les phénomènes que la loi était censée prévenir s'est estompé. Pendant ce temps\, des femmes et des filles continuent d'être contraintes au mariage et les féminicides resten t courante. Ce colloque rassemble des représentants d’organisations commun autaires et de défense des femmes\, d’organismes gouvernementaux et du mon de universitaire afin de partager des points de vue critiques et d’explore r de nouvelles orientations et possibilités pour lutter contre la violence sexiste et prévenir les répercussions intergénérationnelles\, en s’inspir ant de l’histoire du Canada\, de la diversité de ses traditions juridiques et de son pluralisme unique en matière de droit matrimonial.\n\n\nProgram me provisoire:\n\n\n Réunion et rafraîchissements - 8h30-9h00\n\n \n  \n \n\n R emarques d'ouverture - 9h00-9h30\n\n \n Shauna Van Praagh\, Présidente\, Com mission du droit du Canada\n\n Nandini Ramanujam\, Co-directrice\, Centre s ur les droits de la personne et du pluralisme juridique\n \n\n Crimigration\ , Marginalization\, and Resistance - 9:30-11:30\n\n \n Présidente: Lynda Cla rke\, Université Concordia\, Département des religions et des cultures\n\n Deepa Mattoo\, Directrice générale\, YWCA Toronto et Miriam Zucker\, CRSH Boursière Postdoctorale\, Faculté de droit de l'Université ɬ﷬ – A Deca de Since the Zero Tolerance Act: Recontextualizing Forced Marriage as a Fo rm of Coercive Control and Reinvigorating Alternatives to Penal Approaches \n\n Dr. Salina Abji\, Sociologue et consultante en recherche – “Honour”-Ba sed Violence and the Politics of Culture in Canada\n\n Hoori Hamboyan\, Con seillère principale\, Fédération canadienne des organismes de victimes d'a ctes criminels – Access to Justice for Survivors of Gender-Based Violence \n\n Q & R\n \n\n Pause déjéuner - 11h30-12h30\n\n \n  \n \n\n Building Bridges a nd Models of Shared Responsibility - 12h30-14h15\n\n \n **Avertissement** Ve uillez noter que cette session contient des éléments pouvant heurter la se nsibilité de certains ou provoquer des réactions émotionnelles\n\n Présiden te: Miriam Zucker\, CRSH Boursière Postdoctorale\, Faculté de droit de l'U niversité ɬ﷬\n\n 12h30-12h45 – Overview of resources for sexual violenc e response and support at the Student Wellness Hub par Gabrielle Petrucci\ , Conseillière en bien-être - Droit\n\n 12h30-13h00 – Rév. Dr. Anne Marie H unter\, Conseillère principale\, Safe Havens Interfaith Partnership Agains t Domestic Violence and Elder Abuse – Where Faith and Safety Meet: Working with Faith and Spiritual Communities to Increase Safety and Access to Ser vices\n\n 13h00-14h00 – Workshop on restorative & transformative justice mo dels and DEI trauma-informed lawyering \n\n Principaux participants:\n\n Nne ka MacGregor\, Co-fondatrice et directrice générale\, Women’s Centre for S ocial Justice\n\n Kate Crozier\, Directrice générale\, Community Justice In itiatives\n\n Sabha Sajjad-Hazai\, Avocate en droit de famille seniore\, ca binet privé \; ancienne conseillère juridique et responsable de programme\ , Canadian Muslim Women’s Legal Centre Project\n \n\n Pause-café - 14h15-14h 30\n\n \n  \n \n\n Legal Pluralism and Dialogue: Beyond the Public/Private Div ide - 14h30-16h15\n\n \n Président: Michel Morin\, Faculté de droit de l'Uni versité de Montréal \n\n Natasha Bakht\, Faculté de droit de l'Université d 'Ottawa – Religious Barriers\, Legal Pluralism\, and Equality: Rethinking State Responses to “Cultural Violence”\n\n Marie Manikis\, Faculté de droit de l'Université ɬ﷬ - Rethinking Prosecutorial Discretion and State Ac countability in the Criminal Legal Process\n\n Kirsten Anker\, Faculté de d roit de l'Université ɬ﷬ – Indigenous peace-making: dispute resolution that confounds the public/private divide\n\n Q & R\n \n\n Conclusion - 16h15- 16h30\n\n \n Miriam Zucker\, CRSH Boursière Postdoctorale\, Faculté de droit de l'Université ɬ﷬\n \n\n\n \n\n\nBiographies des intervenants:\n\n\n L ynda Clarke\, Université Concordia\, Département des religions et des cult ures\n\n \n Professor Lynda Clarke joined the Department of Religions and Cu ltures at Concordia University after having held positions in the Departme nt of Religion at Bard College and the Department of Asian and Middle East Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. Her research interests include Shiism\, law and gender\, and Islam in the West\, in connection with whic h she has engaged with issues related to the use of Muslim law in Canada. \n \n\n Miriam Zucker\, CRSH Boursière Postdoctorale\, Faculté de droit de l 'Université ɬ﷬\n\n \n Dr. Miriam Zucker received her SJD from the Univer sity of Toronto and holds a Master of Laws degree (LLM\, Public and Intern ational Law specialization) and a Bachelor of Laws degree (LLB). Her work on the intersections of gendered violence and state violence among Indigen ous and racialized communities has been disseminated through public presen tations and publications in scholarly journals and has been recognized wit h the Audre Rapoport Prize for Scholarship on Gender and Human Rights. Her current research\, supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Resear ch Council of Canada (SSHRC)\, examines Canada’s legal response to forced marriage under the Zero Tolerance for Barbaric Cultural Practices Act (201 5) and its impact on survivors\, individuals at risk\, and their families. \n \n\n Deepa Mattoo\, Directrice générale\, YWCA Toronto\n\n \n Deepa Mattoo is an award-winning lawyer\, intersectional feminist\, and social justice advocate who currently serves as the Chief Executive Officer of YWCA Toron to. With a career spanning over 28 years\, her work is defined by a commit ment to advancing equity\, anti-oppression\, and the rights of survivors o f gender-based violence.\n \n\n Dr. Salina Abji\, Sociologue et consultante en recherche\n\n \n Salina Abji has a Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Toronto and a Master’s degree (MSt.) in Women’s Studies from Oxford Un iversity. Her SSHRC-funded postdoctoral fellowship at Carleton University examined Canada's immigration detention system\, focusing on experiences o f detention and anti-border activism among GBV survivors. She has publishe d research on citizenship and migration\, gender-based violence\, and soci al justice activism in scholarly journals like Citizenship Studies\, Signs \, Social Politics\, and Studies in Social Justice. As a research and eval uation consultant\, Salina has worked with national and provincial settlem ent and GBV organizations to build capacity for trauma-informed\, intersec tional\, and culturally-responsive approaches to service provision. In 202 1\, she was awarded a Trailblazers in Social Justice award from the South Asian Legal Clinic of Ontario (SALCO) for her research and activism addres sing structural racism and gender-based violence affecting Ontario’s diver se South Asian communities.\n \n\n Hoori Hamboyan\, Conseillère principale\, Fédération canadienne des organismes de victimes d'actes criminels\n\n \n H oori Hamboyan has a background in social work and law and is currently a s enior advisor at the Office of the Federal Ombudsperson for Victims of Cri me. She was the lead investigator for the office’s systemic investigation on the experiences of survivors of sexual violence and the criminal justic e system. Prior to working with the OFOVC\, she was chair of the federal i nterdepartmental working group on harmful practices for many years. Before joining the federal civil service\, she was a child protection social wor ker and worked in grassroots refugee rights advocacy and counselling with survivors of sexual violence and armed conflict.\n \n\n Rév. Dr. Anne Marie Hunter\, Conseillère principale\, Safe Havens Interfaith Partnership Again st Domestic Violence and Elder Abuse\n\n \n Anne Marie Hunter is an ordained United Methodist pastor who has worked extensively in the field of domest ic violence and elder abuse since 1984. Hunter holds a Master of Divinity from Harvard Divinity School and a Ph.D. in Religion and Society from Drew University. Hunter has worked for two domestic violence service agencies and served as the pastor of East Saugus United Methodist Church in Massach usetts. In 1991\, Hunter and a circle of friends founded Safe Havens Inter faith Partnership Against Domestic Violence and Elder Abuse\, a religiousl y diverse nonprofit organization that works locally and nationally to stre ngthen partnerships between diverse faith communities and frontline worker s to provide support services to domestic and sexual violence survivors.\n \n\n Nneka MacGregor\, Co-fondatrice et directrice générale\, Women’s Centr e for Social Justice\n\n \n Nneka MacGregor\, LL.B. is co-founder and Execut ive Director of the Women’s Centre for Social Justice (WomenatthecentrE). A Black Intersectional abolitionist feminist\, international speaker\, and Transformative Accountability/Justice practitioner\, Nneka is an expert a dvisory panel member of the Canadian Femicide Observatory for Justice and Accountability and founder of the Black Femicide Canada Council. Her resea rch focuses on sexual violence\, and the intersection of strangulation\, T raumatic Brain Injury and GBV. She received the 2019 PINK Concussions Awar d and the 2020 YWCA Women of Distinction Social Justice Award and one of t wo 2024 Activists-in-Residence (AiR) at the University of Guelph\, in Onta rio\, Canada.\n \n\n Kate Crozier\, Directrice générale\, Community Justice Initiatives (CJI)\n\n \n Prior to working at CJI\, Kate spent most of her ca reer working with women impacted by violence. Along the way she had the op portunity to work with criminalized youth\, unhoused women\, as well as me n impacted by sexual harm – all of which helped her understand how people whose needs are not met often become criminalized. Kate has spent 20 years working to address the impacts of gender-based violence\, through a mix o f feminist anti-violence and restorative justice work. Both of these field s have fed her interest in tackling both personal and systemic issues thro ugh non-carceral pathways. Through her different roles in the CJI Kate has come to highly value the de-professionalization of restorative justice wo rk\, and she is proud of the CJI's legacy of equipping community members t o facilitate mediations\, groups\, and circles.\n \n\n Sabha Sajjad-Hazai\, Avocate en droit de famille seniore\, cabinet privé\n\n \n Sabha Sajjad-Haza i launched Canada’s first faith-based legal clinic pilot project supportin g survivors of gender-based violence in diverse Muslim communities navigat ing the family law system in Ontario. She has spent more than two decades advancing access to justice initiatives focused on Muslim women’s legal ri ghts in Canada. She frequently speaks and teaches on the future of law\, e xploring how technology and artificial intelligence can expand access to l egal services for underserved communities. She is a faculty member with Th e Advocates’ Society and a deputy judge in Central West Region Ontario. Sh e also contributes to professional development programming through the Law Society of Ontario and mentors emerging lawyers at Toronto Metropolitan U niversity Lincoln Alexander School of Law.\n \n\n Michel Morin\, Faculté de droit de l'Université de Montréal\n\n \n Michel Morin is a Full Professor at the Faculty of Law of the Université de Montréal. His research focuses on Comparative Legal History of public and private law and the evolution of Aboriginal Peoples’ rights. His book\, co-authored with Arnaud Decroix and David Gilles 'Les tribunaux et l'arbitrage en Nouvelle-France et au Québe c de 1740 à 1784' (Courts and Arbitration in New France and Quebec\, 1740- 1784)\, was awarded the Rodolphe Fournier 2013 prize (ex aequo) by the Féd ération des sociétés d'histoire du Québec (Federation of Historical Societ ies of Quebec) and the Chamber of Notaries. In 2023\, Professor Morin was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.\n \n\n Natasha Bakht\, F aculté de droit de l'Université d'Ottawa\n\n \n Natasha Bakht is a professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Ottawa whose research focuses on the intersection of religious freedom and women’s equality. She has wri tten extensively in the area of religious arbitration. Her research on the niqab analyzes the unwarranted popular panic concerning Muslim women who cover their faces and explores systemic barriers to inclusion perpetuated by Canada’s legal and political system. Her book In Your Face: Law Justice and Niqab-Wearing Women in Canada was listed in the Hill Times 100 Best B ooks of 2020 and received the 2020-2021 Huguenot Society of Canada Award. Prof Bakht is the President of the Canadian Association for the Study of I slam and Muslims. She is also an award-winning dancer and choreographer\, trained in Bharata Natyam and specializing in Indian contemporary dance.\n \n\n Marie Manikis\, Faculté de droit de l'Université ɬ﷬\n\n \n Marie Man ikis is an Associate Professor and William Dawson Chair at the Faculty of Law\, ɬ﷬. She is also a Research Associate at the Centre fo r Criminology\, University of Oxford and at the International Centre for C omparative Criminology\, University of Montreal. Her research is interdisc iplinary and comparative and analyses prosecutorial discretion\, state acc ountability\, as well as victim and community participation across crimina l legal processes. She is the author of Victims as Agents of State Account ability (Oxford University Press\, 2026) and has published in leading jour nals. Her award-winning scholarship has been cited by several courts\, and she regularly advises governmental and non-governmental bodies in Canada and the United Kingdom.\n \n\n Kirsten Anker\, Faculté de droit de l'Univers ité ɬ﷬\n\n \n Kirsten Anker is Associate Professor at ɬ﷬ Faculty of Law\, teaching property\, equity & trusts\, legal theory and Aboriginal la w/Indigenous legal traditions. She has published research on a legal plura list framework for the co-existence of state and Indigenous legal orders\, the integration of Indigenous legal traditions in formal legal education\ , and ecological jurisprudence.\n \n\n\n \n DTSTART:20260608T123000Z DTEND:20260608T203000Z LOCATION:Room 101\, Pavillon Chancellor-Day\, CA\, QC\, Montréal\, H3A 1W9\ , 3644\, rue Peel SUMMARY:What Have We Learned a Decade Since the Zero Tolerance Act? Reimagi ning Law as a Shared Pursuit of Justice URL:/wainwright/fr/channels/event/what-have-we-learned -decade-zero-tolerance-act-reimagining-law-shared-pursuit-justice-372968 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR