Celebrating Asian Heritage Month at UBC: Classical Chinese Garden exhibition at IKBLC
The Garden is moving to UBC! During Asian Heritage Month, visitors of the Irving K. Barber Centre will have the opportunity to the experience the history, culture and symbolism of the Classical Chinese Garden in a series of specially-curated and thematic display cases. This exhibition can be viewed on the IKBLC Foyer, located on the 2nd floor of the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre. In addition, a program will accompany this exhibition on May 24, 11.30AM.

As part of the programming planned for the exhibition, a moderated presentation will be hosted for collaborated garden conversations with the UBC Botanical Garden and Nitobe Japanese Garden. Join us on UBC Alumni Weekend to listen to speakers in lively talks about these built spaces of nature and the role they play in our contemporary urban contexts. All are welcome, the event is free. For more information, contact education@vancouverchinesegarden.com or 604-662-3207 ext. 205.
Resources available at UBC Library
Keswick, Maggie, Judy Oberlander, and Joe Wai. In a Chinese Garden: The Art & Architecture of the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden. Raincoast Book Dist Ltd, 1990. [Available at UBC Library]
Mooney, Patrick, and Caswell, Rick. Understanding culture through design : an examination of the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden / Patrick F. Mooney. Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Garden Society of Vancouver, 1991. [Available at UBC Library]
Partners:
The Next Step: Making the Pitch
Webcast sponsored by alumni UBC. Got a great idea that you want to put into action but need to get some people on your side first? Want to be able to concisely and convincingly explain why you’re the right person for the job or why your project should get top priority at work? You need a spectacular elevator pitch and the tools to make your case. Whether you work in the non-profit, small business, or corporate sectors, are pursuing a career in these areas or simply want to learn techniques for honing your pitching skills, this event is for you. This event took place February 4, 2014, in Vancouver.
Moderator
Lien Yeung – Weather and Community Host, CBC News Vancouver Saturday and CBC News Vancouver Sunday, UBC Masters in Journalism candidate
Panelists
Terry Beech – Entrepreneur, Educator, and Public Servant; Adjunct Professor, UBC’s Sauder School of Business
Linda Diano, BSc’87, MBA’92 – Principal, Virago Consulting; Associate, Maximum Impact Training & Development; Co-Founder, The Power in Sport
Dustin Sproat, MBA’13 – Co-founder and CEO, Shnarped
Relevant Books and Articles at UBC Library
Beech, T., Canada, A., Canadian Public Policy Collection, & Canadian Electronic Library (Firm). (2011). Fueling Canada’s economic success a national strategy for high-growth entrepreneurship. Action Canada. [Link]
UBC Library Research Guides
Alice Woolley – The lawyer as advisor: advocate, judge or… friend?
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by the UBC Faculty of Law. When lawyers advise clients they help the law to accomplish both its function as a system of social settlement, and the respect for the governed reflected in its processes and structure – i.e. the rule of law. A lawyer can only do so, however, if his/her advice provides an objectively reasonable assessment of the law, while also facilitating the accomplishment of the client’s goals and objectives. The lawyer as advisor is neither an advocate for the client’s goals, nor an adjudicator of the legality of those goals. Rather, the lawyer’s advising role has an irreducible duality, requiring good faith respect for both the law and the client – not unlike the attitude taken by a friend when offering advice.Unfortunately, the law governing Canadian lawyers does not provide sufficient guidance to lawyers as to their obligations when advising clients.
About the speaker:
Alice Woolley is a Professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Calgary. Prior to joining the Faculty in 2004 Professor Woolley practiced law in Calgary, working in the areas of utility regulation and civil litigation. As an academic, she specializes in legal ethics and professional regulation, with a particular interest in the intersection between professional regulation, moral philosophy and moral psychology. Professor Woolley is the author of Understanding Lawyers’ Ethics in Canada and co-editor and co-author of Lawyers’ Ethics and Professional Regulation (2d ed.). She has published articles on topics such as the good character requirement for law society admission, the independence of the bar, civility, legal ethics teaching and the normative conception of the lawyer’s role. Professor Woolley has her LLM from Yale Law School and her BA and LLB from the University of Toronto, where she graduated with the gold medal. In 1995-1996 she was a law clerk to then Chief Justice of Canada, the Rt. Hon. Antonio Lamer.
Select Articles and Books Available at UBC Library
Woolley, A. (2011). Understanding lawyers’ ethics in Canada. Markham, Ont: LexisNexis.
Woolley, A. (2008). Lawyers’ ethics and professional regulation. Markham, Ont: LexisNexis Canada.
Woolley, A., Canadian Public Policy Collection, University of Calgary School of Public Policy, & Canadian Electronic Library (Firm). (2011). Rhetoric and realities what independence of the bar requires of lawyer regulation. School of Public Policy, University of Calgary. [Link]
Woolley, A. (2009). Ethics as regulation: A comment on merchant v. law society of Saskatchewan. Saskatchewan Law Review, 72(2), 279. [Link]
UBC Library Research Guides
Renee Cochard – Unmarried Cohabitants’ Property Entitlements: A Gendered Approach
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by the UBC Faculty of Law. Until the late seventies/early eighties, women who were separating from their spouses had no right to claim property acquired during marriage unless it was registered in their names. The SCC decision of Murdoch v. Murdoch rendered in 1975 exposed the inequalities of the law. Beginning in the late seventies provincial governments began passing matrimonial property legislation which allowed for equal division of marital property. The legislation only applied to married persons and unmarried persons were left to apply for division of property under the equitable rules of trust, a complicated and costly process. In 2001 a challenge by Susan Welsh to the NS Matrimonial Property Act came before the SCC. In a surprising decision, the SCC held that excluding unmarried cohabitants from Matrimonial Legislation did not contravene section 15 of the Charter. Despite that ruling several provinces have revised their property legislation to include unmarried persons but the vast majority of unmarried Canadians are not protected. This exclusion has a gendered perspective and affects women and children to a much larger extent.
Speaker Bio: Renee R. Cochard, a family law lawyer from Alberta, has practiced exclusively Family Law since being admitted to the bar in 1979. She has an LLM from York U in Alternative Dispute Resolution (2003) and is presently a PHD Candidate in Law at UBC.
Select Articles and Books Available at UBC Library
Singer, J. W., & Ebrary Academic Complete (Canada) Subscription Collection. (2000). Entitlement: The paradoxes of property. New Haven: Yale University Press. [Link]
Paul, J. (1990). PROPERTY, ENTITLEMENT, AND REMEDY. The Monist, 73(4), 564-577. [Link]
Smith, H. E. (2007). Intellectual property as property: Delineating entitlements in information. The Yale Law Journal, 116(8), 1742-1822. [Link]
Brigham, J. (1990). Property and the politics of entitlement. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
UBC Library Research Guides