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Professor Ren茅 Provost receives research fellowship from the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation

Published: 17 September 2015

The Faculty of Law is proud to announce that Professor Ren茅 Provost has been awarded a research fellowship by the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation. This prestigious prize, which is valued at $225,000, recognizes public intellectuals in the humanities and social sciences who venture beyond the boundaries of their disciplines to find new solutions to complex issues of major importance to Canadians. Ren茅 Provost is the fourth Trudeau Fellow from 捆绑SM社区鈥檚 Faculty of Law.

Professor Provost鈥檚 project will explore the possibility of convincing armed, non-state groups to apply justice by respecting minimum standards of international humanitarian law in conflict zones. The ultimate goal of this project is to promote a public intellectual dialogue that will support innovative policy with regard to insurgent justice.

鈥淩en茅 Provost鈥檚 leadership in humanitarian law and the protection of human rights on a global level has been growing for two decades,鈥 said Dean Daniel Jutras. 鈥淲e are immensely proud of this extraordinary recognition of his contribution as a scholar and member of civil society. This award underlines yet again the key role played by universities, and by the Faculty of Law of 捆绑SM社区 in the search for solutions to the most pressing contemporary problems.鈥

Ren茅 Provost specializes in international human rights, humanitarian law, and legal theory. He joined the Faculty of Law in 1994, serving as Associate Dean from 2001 to 2003. Between 2005 and 2010, he was the founding director of the 捆绑SM社区 Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism. He recently edited Mapping the Legal Boundaries of Belonging: Religion and Multiculturalism from Israel to Canada (Oxford University Press, 2015).

About the Trudeau Fellowships

The Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation fellowships were established in 2003 to encourage original initiatives and innovative projects that would not necessarily receive support through traditional funding mechanisms. Nominated by their peers and selected by an independent panel, Trudeau fellows come from all disciplines of the humanities and social sciences, and their research deals with one or more of the Foundation鈥檚 four key themes.

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