Federation of Law Reform Agencies of Canada (FOLRAC) Annual Conference 2025
The annual FOLRAC Conference is hosted by the British Columbia Law Institute in collaboration with law reform organizations across Canada and the Law Commission of Canada. This gathering brings together representatives from seven provinces, as well as national and international experts, public institutions, and community organizations engaged in law and justice reform.
The conference provides a unique opportunity to exchange insights, discuss current and emerging law reform initiatives, and strengthen connections across jurisdictions. Representatives from law reform agencies in Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Ontario, Quebec, and Nova Scotia will share updates on their work and explore new directions for legal development.
Date and Time
Wednesday, May 28 | 9:00 am – 4:30 pm
Thursday, May 29 | 9:00 am – 4:30 pm
Location
UBC Robson Square, Theatre C-300
800 Robson Street, Vancouver
Live Translation
Translation is available through Wordly. To access it, go to the Wordly website, choose your preferred language, and click “Attend.” You can read captions on your device and use a headset to listen to the audio.
Conference Program
Download the program for the event below.
Speaker Bios
Click on the names of the speakers below to view their biographies.
Chief Justice Leonard Marchand, Court of Appeal of British Columbia
The Honourable Leonard Marchand is the Chief Justice of the Court of Appeal of British Columbia and Chief Justice of the Court of Appeal of Yukon. He is the first person of Indigenous (First Nations) identity to hold the post of Chief Justice. Chief Justice Marchand is Sylix, specifically a member of the Okanagan Indian Band. Chief Justice Marchand has dedicated a substantial portion of his career to achieving reconciliation for Indigenous Peoples, including by advancing civil claims on behalf of residential school Survivors. In 2005, he helped negotiate and was a signatory to the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement.
Chief Justice Ronald A. Skolrood, Supreme Court of British Columbia
The Honourable Ronald A. Skolrood was appointed to the Supreme Court of British Columbia in 2013 and to the Court of Appeal for British Columbia in 2022. Prior to his appointment to the Bench, Chief Justice Skolrood practised at Lawson Lundell LLP from 1987 to 2013 and was a law clerk at the Supreme Court of Canada from 1986 to 1987. His practice focused on civil and commercial litigation. He was appointed King’s Counsel in 2012.
Greg Blue, KC, Lawyer, BC Law Institute
Greg Blue is a staff lawyer with the BC Law Institute. He obtained an LL.B. from the University of Victoria and an LL.M. from the University of Toronto. After being called first to the Saskatchewan Bar, he practised with law firms in Regina and Saskatoon. He served in the Constitutional Law Branch, Sask. Department of Justice and also as solicitor to the Department of Energy & Mines. Called to the BC Bar in 1986, he was a Legal Research Officer to the Law Reform Commission from 1989-1997.
Karen Campbell, Executive Director, BC Law Institute
Karen Campbell (she/her) is the Executive Director of the British Columbia Law Institute (BCLI). She brings over 25 years of experience practicing public interest law in BC – most of which has involved law reform and advocacy for strengthened legal tools. Her work has consistently been designed to address access to justice issues, using both Indigenous and Crown legal frameworks. She has forged effective relationships with a broad range of stakeholders, developed creative approaches to legal challenges and contributed to both federal and provincial law reform initiatives. She holds a Bachelor of Laws degree from Dalhousie University and a Masters in Law from the University of London, England.
Emily Drown, Chair, Employment and Assistance Appeal Tribunal
Emily is an active member of the administrative law community. She is presently Chair of British Columbia’s Employment and Assistance Appeal Tribunal, having been appointed to the position in 2018. Prior to that, she served on the Safety Standards Appeal Board as both a vice-chair and chair. She is a past president of the BC Council of Administrative Tribunals, director of the Canadian Council of Administrative Tribunals and the current chair of the BC Circle of Chairs. Emily is a non-practicing member of the Law Society of British Columbia and was called to the Bar of British Columbia in 2005. Prior to moving to non-practicing status in 2021, Emily maintained a professional law practice on Vancouver Island with a focus on civil litigation and family law.
Stacey Edzerza-Fox, KC | Sāda, BCLI Board member, Lawyer, Stacey Edzerza Fox Law Corporation
Stacey is a member of the Tahltan Nation. She has been an Indigenous rights lawyer for more than twenty years, working with Nations to protect and advance the full enjoyment of their inherent, constitutional and human rights. Stacey is dedicated to achieving social and legal justice – and Indigenous cultural, social and economic well-being – through the revitalization and development of Indigenous laws, strong governance, strategic negotiations, and legislative and policy reform. This work includes collaborating to align Crown laws and policies with international human rights standards, and to develop new approaches and mechanisms in support of legal pluralism. Stacey is a member of her family governance structure participating in the Tahltan Central Government, in support of the exercise of Tahltan title and rights in unceded Tahltan territory.
Leah George-Wilson, BCLI Board member, Lawyer, Miller Titerle + Co
Leah George-Wilson, whose ancestral name is Sisi-ya-ama Tsiyalia, is a distinguished Indigenous leader and lawyer. She was the first woman elected Chief of the Tsleil-Waututh Nation (TWN), a position she held from 2001-2003 and 2005–2009, and has been involved in the TWN for many years in various capacities. Leah served as co-chair the First Nations Health Council and as director for both the Land Advisory Board and the Four Host First Nations. In her role with the Four Host First Nations, she played a key part in ensuring Indigenous representation at the 2010 Winter Olympics. Leah’s expertise spans Indigenous governance, Indigenous legal orders, reconciliation, and government relations. She has negotiated for her community at both federal and provincial levels, building strong connections with government leaders.
Leah Howie, Director, Law Reform Commission of Saskatchewan
Leah Howie is the Director of the Law Reform Commission of Saskatchewan and President of the Federation of Law Reform Agencies of Canada. Leah is also a sessional lecturer for the University of Saskatchewan College of Law where she teaches the Current Issues in Law Reform seminar course and coaches the College’s environmental moot team. She is also a member of Saskatchewan’s Access to Justice Network, and is assisting CREATE Justice on its youth legal literacy project in that capacity.
Dr. Amokura Kawharu, President, New Zealand Law Commission
Dr Amokura Kawharu was appointed President of the New Zealand Law Commission in 2020. She practised commercial law in Auckland and Sydney between 1997 and 2004 and then worked in academia from 2005 to 2020 specialising in commercial and investment arbitration, property law and international economic regulation. Amokura is co-author of Williams & Kawharu on Arbitration and has published widely in the arbitration law field. She is a Barrister of the High Court of New Zealand and a Fellow of the Arbitrators’ and Mediators’ Institute of New Zealand.
Brea Lowenberger, Director, CREATE Justice
Brea Lowenberger is Saskatchewan’s first Access to Justice Coordinator; Cofounder/Director of CREATE Justice, an action-oriented access to justice research centre at the University of Saskatchewan (U of S) that is working on transforming legal and justice services and the removal of systemic barriers to justice; and a sessional lecturer for the award-winning Dean’s Forum on Access to Justice and Dispute Resolution course at the U of S.
Matt Mazurek, Legal Counsel, Alberta Law Reform Institute
Matthew Mazurek is a legal counsel with the Alberta Law Reform Institute. His work focuses on in-depth legal research and analysis to help the ALRI Board make recommendations for reform. Matt also brings a passion for asking questions to his role, encouraging more broad based consultation with the profession and the public. In essence, he’s just a law nerd trying to improve the laws of Alberta.
Dr. Val Napoleon, Director of the Indigenous Law Research Unit, University of Victoria
Val Napoleon is a professor, director of the Indigenous Law Research Unit, and the Law Foundation Chair of Indigenous Justice and Governance in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria. She is from Saulteau First Nation, and an adopted member of the Gitanyow (Gitksan) House of Luuxhon, Ganada (Frog) Clan. Her research focuses on Indigenous legal traditions and theory, Indigenous feminism, self-determination, and governance. She co-founded UVic’s joint degree program in Canadian Common Law and Indigenous Legal Orders (JD/JID) — the first Indigenous law degree program in the world.
Pierre Noreau, President, Quebec Institute for Law and Justice Reform (IQRDJ)
Pierre Noreau is a Professor at the Faculty of Law of the University of Montreal and a researcher of the Centre de recherche en droit public, where he was Director from 2003 to 2006. Since 2018, Pierre Noreau has been President of the Quebec Institute for Law and Justice Reform (IQRDJ). He has also been the Scientific Director of the Access to Law and Justice project (adaj.ca) since 2016. A political scientist and lawyer by training, he works more specifically in the field of the sociology of law.
Marie Ong, Lawyer, BC Law Institute
Marie Ong is a staff lawyer with the BC Law Institute. She completed her law degree at the University of British Columbia and was called to the BC Bar in 2022. Prior to joining BCLI, Marie articled and worked as an associate at Vancouver-based national firm where she specialized in class actions, medical negligence, occupiers’ liability, and personal injury claims.
Alexandra Pasca, Executive Director, Quebec Institute for Law and Justice Reform (IQRDJ)
Alexandra Pasca has been a lawyer since 2011, with a doctorate from McGill University (LLD 2023) as well as master’s degree from McGill and bachelor’s from Université de Montréal. She has significant experience in management and research. For over a decade, she has collaborated on large-scale, funded and team projects, carried out in partnership with the legal and community communities. Before joining the IQRDJ as Executive Director, Alexandra Pasca served as interim director of the Fondation du Barreau du Québec.
Jodi Roach, Executive Director, Ministry of Attorney General
Jodi Roach is a leader in family law reform and the Executive Director of Family Policy, Legislation and Transformation Division in the Justice Services Branch for the Government of British Columbia. As Executive Director, Jodi is responsible for setting the strategic direction for family law in British Columbia. With more than 15 years of experience, she leads a team working to evolve the family legal system toward one that is less adversarial and more proportional so families can resolve matters in ways that work best for them when while accessing the supports they need. Jodi lives and works in the unceded territory of the lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) People, known today as the Esquimalt and Songhees Nations. She is originally from Treaty 6 Territory in Saskatchewan.
Aneurin (Nye) Thomas, Executive Director, Law Commission of Ontario
Nye has more than 20 years of experience leading sophisticated, multidisciplinary projects in Ontario’s justice sector. As ED of the Law Commission of Ontario, Nye is responsible for producing independent and evidence-based analysis and recommendations on complex law reform issues. Prior to this, Nye was Director General, Policy at Legal Aid Ontario (LAO) where he was responsible for policy development, consultations, and system planning at one of the world’s largest legal aid plans. Nye’s work at LAO included leading the most significant expansion of legal aid services in more than 20 years. Nye has also been Policy Director on major provincial inquiries, including the Ipperwash Inquiry.
Ange Valentini, Facilitator, Strategic Impact Collective
Ange Valentini brings 25 years of experience building creative solutions to complex challenges that drive social change and public good, bringing together stakeholders, influencers and decision makers across the private, public and third sector — with a focus on building relationships and stronger communities. Ange has worked across all three orders of government, working her way up from policy analyst to Chief of Staff. In each role, she championed innovative policy agendas based on research, evaluation, analysis, and stakeholder engagement.
Shauna Van Praagh, President, Law Commission of Canada
Shauna Van Praagh is a Full Professor (on leave) at McGill University, where she was awarded the Principal’s Prize for Excellence in Teaching in 2023. She has been a member of the Faculty of Law since 1993 and served as Associate Dean (Graduate Studies in Law) from 2007 to 2010. Her areas of teaching, research and writing include children and law, social diversity and law, legal education, civil liability, comparative legal traditions, and storytelling in law. She has been intensively involved in the development of teaching and learning in law, serving as President of the Canadian Association of Law Teachers in 2013-2014, and appointed in 2015 as one of two academic members of the National Requirement Review Committee under the auspices of the Federation of Law Societies of Canada. A graduate of the University of Toronto (LLB) and Columbia University (LLM and JSD), she clerked for the Right Honourable Brian Dickson, Chief Justice of Canada, in 1989-1990.
Megan Vis-Dunbar, Lawyer and Director of the RCLF Program, BC Law Institute
Megan Vis-Dunbar is a staff lawyer with the BC Law Institute and Director of the Reconciling Crown Legal Frameworks Program. Prior to joining the BCLI, Megan practiced in the areas of criminal and constitutional law and word as a research lawyer, she also worked with the Courthouse Libraries BC where she coordinated the legal community training program.
Clifford White, Director, BC First Nations Justice Council
Clifford White (Nees Ma’Outa) is a hereditary leader and a former Chief Councillor of Gitxaała Nation, Clifford has dedicated his life to serving Indigenous people. As an Elder he has played an important role in BC’s First Nations/Indigenous Courts supporting holistic, traditional ways to restore balance and healing. In addition to his involvement as an Elder in the New Westminster First Nations Courts, he is also a Commissioner with BC Housing and a Commissioner with BC Infrastructure Benefits.
Alison Wilkinson, Lawyer, BC Law Institute
Alison Wilkinson (she/her) is a staff lawyer with the British Columbia Law Institute, where her research has engaged issues related to family law and the experiences of vulnerable communities in relation to the justice system. She has a keen interest in the development of tools and resources to strengthen legal practice and advance justice related reforms. Prior to joining the BC Law Institute, Alison worked as a family law lawyer and as in-house counsel with a small business. Alison has trained in arbitration, mediation, and coaching, and also acted as a sessional instructor on dispute resolution for the Faculty of Business at Thompson Rivers University.
Jessica Wood, Deputy Minister of the Declaration Act Secretariat
Known as Si Sityaawks – (Woman who creates change), Jessica is from the Gitxsan and Tsimshian First Nations with extended roots among the Tahltan and Nisga’a Nations. Currently serving as Deputy Minister of the Declaration Act Secretariat, Jessica is leading British Columbia’s cross-ministry work to adopt and implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (The Declaration), the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Calls to Action, and learnings from relevant case law. As part of this transformation, she has led, in collaboration with the First Nations Leadership Council, the development of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, to implement the UN Declaration in provincial law.
Kevin Zakreski, Lawyer, BC Law Institute
Kevin Zakreski is a staff lawyer with the BC Law Institute. He graduated from UBC Law School and was called to the BC Bar in 2001. He articled and practised with Chow and Company in downtown Vancouver in the area of corporate/commercial law. Kevin has also participated in a number of projects with the Uniform Law Conference of Canada
About FOLRAC
More than four decades ago, Federation of Law Reform Agencies of Canada (FOLRAC) started as an informal meeting of law reform representatives that gathered together during the annual meetings of the Uniform Law Conference of Canada. These meetings evolved into structured events where law reformers shared their experiences, discussed challenges and successes, and assisted each other in carrying out their work.