Faculty of Law to launch consultation on building name

Faculty of Law to launch consultation on building name

The consultation process will involve the formation of a committee consisting of students, faculty, staff, and alumni that will consider comments about the law building name.

By Communications Staff

June 25, 2020

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Sir John A. Macdonald Hall.
The Faculty of Law at Queen's has committed to a formal consultation process to review the name of its building, Sir John A. Macdonald Hall.

The Queen鈥檚 University Faculty of Law today announced that it is committing to a formal consultation process to review the name of its building, Sir John A. Macdonald Hall.

鈥淕iven his role in the formation of Canada, there were good reasons to honour Sir John A. Macdonald when the building was named in 1960,鈥 says Mark Walters, Dean of the Faculty of Law. 鈥淏ut the work of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission has brought greater public awareness to Macdonald鈥檚 negative legacies, in particular the development of the Indian residential school policy in Canada. In response to concerns raised in this respect, we are therefore beginning a process of consultation on whether the name Sir John A. Macdonald continues to be appropriate for the law school鈥檚 building.鈥

The consultation process will involve the formation of a committee consisting of students, faculty, staff, and alumni that will welcome and consider comments from both within and outside the Queen鈥檚 community about the law building name. The matter will also be considered by the law school鈥檚 Faculty Board.

Based upon these consultations and deliberations, the Dean of Law will present a report and recommendation regarding the name of the building to the Principal and Vice-Chancellor Patrick Deane, in late August. Principal Deane will consider this recommendation and formulate his own recommendation which he will submit to the Board of Trustees, which has authority over university building names, in time for its September meeting.

鈥淭he Faculty of Law is the most directly affected by the name of its building, and so I鈥檓 pleased that Dean Walters has undertaken this consultation process,鈥 said Principal Deane. 鈥淚 am confident that comments will be welcomed from across the Queen鈥檚 community and beyond, and I look forward to the Dean鈥檚 final report and recommendation.鈥

Since 2016, the law school has been engaged with implementing the recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, including hiring an Indigenous Recruitment and Support Officer and the creation of two bursaries to support Indigenous students at the law school. Academically, it has integrated a number of Aboriginal and Indigenous law courses in its curriculum, and recently announced the creation of the Chief Don Maracle Reconciliation/Indigenous Knowledge Initiative. The school has welcomed a wide range of Indigenous lecturers and visitors to the faculty, with 11 scholars and leaders visiting the school in the 2019-20 school year alone. In 2018, it saw the creation and installation of a major piece of public art in its atrium themed on the Indigenous legal tradition of wampum belts, words that are lasting, by Mohawk artist Hannah Claus.  

The focus of the consultation process will be on the law building鈥檚 present name rather than an alternative name.

鈥淲e have decided to separate the question of de-naming from the question of re-naming,鈥 says Dean Walters. 鈥淥nly if the Board of Trustees decides to de-name the building will a separate process regarding a new name commence, a process that would of course be governed by the values, principles, and policies of the university.鈥

Full details on the process, including a statement from Dean Walters and a timeline detailing next steps, can be found at .

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