AI & Law Certificate

One-week e-learning program for professionals

Canada is in the midst of a major technological revolution in artificial intelligence (AI), one that is transforming the practice of law, delivery of legal services, and access to justice. Join us for the Queen’s Law AI and Law Certificate, a virtual program running from December 9-13, 2024.

Forecast change in the AI era

Designed for non-lawyers and lawyers alike, the AI and Law Certificate bridges theory and practice to give participants a foundational understanding of AI in the context of Canadian law. Taught by top researchers and experts in the legal AI field, participants will learn how to use AI tools for legal research as well as explore key concepts related to the governance and regulation of AI, intellectual property, data privacy, and the risks and opportunities that lay ahead in, for example, the management of human resources, administrative law and health law. Be prepared for transformation and gain insights on AI governance, legal compliance, and global collaboration to propel your career.

REGISTER FOR THE LAW AND AI CERTIFICATE

Got questions about the AI and Law Certificate? Contact us lawprofessionalcertificates@queensu.ca

Testimonial

 

“I would highly recommend the Queen’s AI and Law Certificate to anyone seeking to stay at the forefront of technological and legal developments. The program’s interdisciplinary approach equips you not only with a solid understanding of AI’s impact on legal practice but also with the tools to anticipate and address future challenges in the field of law. It’s an investment that will deepen your expertise and broaden your perspectives, making you a more effective and innovative leader.”

Clyphendie Pierre-Louis
Director General (A), Services to Business Branch


 

Certificate at a glance

Taught by experts

Taught by experts

Leading experts from Queen’s Law, University of Ottawa, Osgoode Law, Queen’s Conflict Analytics Lab, and more, will present on a range of pressing issues and emerging themes designed to take a deeper look at AI, law and society.
Virtual Format

Virtual format

Runs full-time over five days on Zoom, December 9-13. The workshops will be capped at a maximum of 30 participants. Active participation (camera on over Zoom) is required in all sessions and discussions to complete the certificate.

acredited learning

Professional development

Students who complete the course will receive an AI and Law Certificate from Queen’s Faculty of Law. Eligible participants can also receive four (4) Continuing Professional Development credits upon completion of the course.

open to all learners

Open to all learners

Open to individuals with legal and non-legal backgrounds from every sector. Learners without a legal background will be required to review an introductory module.

 

 

What you will learn

This week-long virtual e-learning program will help you gain a practical understanding of how machine-based learning and generative AI are rapidly shaping legal operations in all aspects of Canadian society, taught by interdisciplinary experts who are at the forefront of change. The Queen’s AI and Law Certificate will help you:

  1. Strengthen your AI literacy around emerging technological developments, policy and regulatory implications, and risks and opportunities posed by AI.
  2. Understand how you can employ AI in legal research and leverage legal AI to drive cultural change in your organization to remain agile in the AI era.
  3. Accelerate your professional development objectives and stand out in a changing marketplace.
  4. Discover how to maximize AI to better engage customers, stakeholders, clients, and key audiences. 

Who should attend

This virtual e-learning program is designed for all learners. No prior experience or legal training is required. A short introductory module will be provided to participants with no legal background to familiarize them with key legal concepts and terminology that will be covered in the course.

The AI and Law Certificate is for learners from diverse professional backgrounds, sectors and disciplines. Whether you work in government policy development, non-profit administration, private or in-house legal practice, academia and research, start-up or large-scale business, there is something in this course for you.

Fees

The fee for the 2024 AI and Law Certificate is $2,150 (CAD) plus HST, and is payable upon acceptance of an offer of admission. 

Registration Process

 

  1. Click HERE to register for the course and submit payment.
  2. Please send a bio and/or professional CV to Lawprofessionalcertificates@queensu.ca to be shared with course instructors and participants.

 

Schedule

Schedule Facilitator Topic
PRE: all participants from a non-legal background/education must view asynchronous Introduction to Canadian Law Video & complete a brief quiz on its contents
Mon AM Colleen M. Flood (SJD), Dean of the Faculty of Law (Queen’s Law)  & Bryan Thomas (SJD), Research Associate (Queen’s Law)  The Basics: An Introduction to Law & AI
Mon PM Bryan Thomas (SJD) (Featuring Colleen Flood) Regulatory Landscape
Tues AM Amy Salyzyn (SJD), Associate Professor (uOttawa Law) The Ethical Lawyer & The AI Machine
Tues PM Bita Amani (SJD), Associate Professor (Queen’s Law)  Algorithmic Bias and What It Means for Law and Lawyers
Wed AM Erica Friesen (M.I.), Research and Instruction Librarian (Queen’s Law)  Mind-floss: AI and Legal Research
Wed PM Teresa Scassa (SJD), Canada Research Chair in Information Law and Policy & Professor (uOttawa Law)  Keep it Secret/Keep it Safe: Privacy, Data Governance & AI
Thurs AM Carys Craig (SJD), Academic Director of the Osgoode Professional Development LLM Program in Intellectual Property Law & Associate Professor (Osgoode Hall Law)  Copyright, Art-AI and All That Jazz
Thurs PM Samuel Dahan (PhD), Director of Conflict Analytics Lab & Associate Professor (Queen’s Law)  AI & the Future of the Legal Industry
Fri AM Paul Daly (PhD), Chair in Administrative Law and Governance (uOttawa Law)  AI and Admin Law / Accountability
Fri PM Colleen M. Flood (SJD), Dean of the Faculty of Law (Queen’s Law)  Machine MD

 


 

Content experts

Colleen M. Flood

Colleen M. Flood

Dean, Queen's University Faculty of Law

Colleen M. Flood is the Dean of the Faculty of Law at Queen’s University. She served as a professor and the Canada Research Chair for the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Law from 2000-2014 and as the inaugural director of the Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics and University of Ottawa Research Chair in Health Law & Policy from 2014-2023. Dr. Flood holds a Doctor of Juridical Science (SJD) and Master of Laws (LLM) from the University of Toronto and a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) Honours from the University of Auckland, New Zealand. Her research informed national and global debates over privatization, health system design, accountability, governance, and the role of courts in defending rights in health care. 

Her latest research focuses on the governance of health-related artificial intelligence. She holds many honours and accomplishments, including being named a Justice Emmet Hall Laureate in 2022, and member of the Canadian Council of Academies Scientific Advisory Committee in 2021, and a member of the Royal Society Taskforce on COVID-19 in 2021. She has over 100 publications and over 1200 citations, including publications on implementing digital passports for COVID-19 immunizations, vaccine ins and outs, the legal issues that have been raised in the presence of COVID-19, and accounts of what our country could look like post-pandemic.

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Teresa Scassa

Teresa Scassa

Faculty Member University of Ottawa

Dr. Teresa Scassa is the Canada Research Chair in Information Law and Policy, a Faculty member at the Centre for Law, Technology and Society, and a Full Professor in the Faculty of Law, Common Law Section at the University of Ottawa, with cross-appointment to the School of Information Studies.

Dr. Scassa’s research explores the intersection of law and technology. She has written widely about intellectual property and privacy law issues in a broad range of contexts. Her ongoing research projects are on artificial intelligence and the law, data governance, data privacy, and legal dimensions of data scraping. Dr. Scassa’s published works include Artificial Intelligence and the Law in Canada (LexisNexis 2021).

She is a member of Canada’s Advisory Council on Artificial Intelligence, a member of the Law Commission of Ontario’s Advisory Panel on the AI in Civil and Administrative Justice Project, and currently sits on two data policy-related working groups in Ontario. She is a past member of the Canadian Government Advisory Panel on Open Government and of the External Advisory Committee to the Privacy Commissioner of Canada. Dr. Scassa earned her LL.B. in Common and Civil Law from McGill University, and her LL.M. and SJD in Law from the University of Michigan.

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Erica Friesen

Erica Friesen

Research and Instruction Librarian (Law) and Online Learning Specialist Queen's Unversity

Erica Friesen holds a joint appointment between the William R. Lederman Law Library and the Faculty of Law at Queen’s University as the Research and Instruction Librarian (Law) and Online Learning Specialist.

In this role, Erica focuses on developing library support for online learning, creating opportunities for students to engage with emerging legal research technologies, and building shared foundational resources to support legal research skills. She has also written and presented on the implications of AI for libraries and legal research. Erica has an MI from the University of Toronto and BA Hons from McGill University.

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Amy F. Salyzyn

Amy F. Salyzyn

Associate Professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Ottawa

Dr. Amy Salyzyn is a Faculty member at the Center for Law, Technology and Society, and an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Law, Common Law Section at the University of Ottawa. She is an expert in the area of legal ethics, lawyer regulation, the use of technology in the delivery of legal services, and access to justice.

Dr. Salyzyn is also the President of the Canadian Association for Legal Ethics. She has also served as co-chair of the board of the National Association of Women and the Law and as a “Learned Counsel Advisor” for the National Association of Bar Counsel (US), Entity Regulation Committee.

Before coming to the University of Ottawa, Dr. Amy Salyzyn served as a judicial law clerk at the Court of Appeal for Ontario and practiced at a Toronto litigation boutique. Dr. Salyzyn received her J.S.D. and LL.M. from Yale Law School, and her J.D. from the University of Toronto Law School, where she was awarded the Dean’s Key upon graduation.

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Bita Amani

Bita Amani

Associate Professor Queen's University

Dr. Bita Amani is an associate professor at Queen’s Law and co-director of Feminist Legal Studies Queen’s.

Professor Amani teaches courses in intellectual property, information privacy, and feminist legal studies (workshop). She is currently working on a number of issues related to food law and governance, intellectual property, algorithmic error and privacy law. Dr. Amani served briefly as a legislative drafter for, the Ministry of the Attorney General (Ontario), Office of the Legislative Counsel (37th Legislative Session, 2001).

Dr. Amani’s research is focused on intellectual property law, policy, innovation and sustainable development, regulating new technologies (from biotech to AI/robotics), biopiracy and protection of traditional and cultural knowledge, regulatory issues in medical/scientific research and its commercialization, privacy and data protection, regulatory diversity, feminist and critical legal studies.

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Samuel Dahan

Samuel Dahan

Associate Professor Queen's University

Samuel Dahan is an associate professor at Queen’s Law and an adjunct professor at Cornell Law School. He is the Director of the Conflict Analytics Lab, a consortium for AI research on law and conflict resolution, and the Chief of Policy at Deel and the Chair of the Deel Lab for Global Employment, a policy institute on global work. Dahan served as a Cabinet Minister (Referendaire) at the Court of Justice of the European Union and Policy Advisor at the EU Commission.

Dahan is leading the development of MyOpenCourt and OpenJustice, two AI legal systems. Dahan’s research has been published in such journals as the International Journal of Economic Law; McGill Law Journal; European Labour Law Journal; Industrial Law Journal; Journal of Law and AI; AAAI; and ICML. His work has been featured in Business Insider, Global News, Bloomberg, Semafore, Børsen and HR.com.

Dahan holds a doctorate from the University of Cambridge. He has studied law and dispute resolution at Harvard Law School; the Ecole Normale Supérieure (ENS-Ulm); the Sorbonne; Leuven University in Belgium; and the University of Nice.

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Paul Daly

Paul Daly

Chair in Administrative Law and Governance

Dr. Paul Daly is a faculty member at the Centre for Law, Technology and Society, the University Research Chair in Administrative Law and Governance, and an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Law, Common Law Section at the University of Ottawa.

Under his Research Chair in Administrative Law and Governance, Professor Daly’s work examines the relationship between the administrative state, individuals and the courts, the role of artificial intelligence in administrative law, and the nature of legal controls on public power exercised by private entities.

Dr. Daly’s academic work has regularly been cited by Canadian courts and administrative tribunals—his award-winning blog, Administrative Law Matters, was the first ever blog cited by the Supreme Court of Canada.

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Carys Craig

Carys Craig

Associate Professor Osgoode Faculty of Law

Dr. Carys Craig is a member of the Osgoode Faculty of Law, Academic Director of the Osgoode Professional Development LLM Program in Intellectual Property, and Director of IP Osgoode. Dr. Craig teaches JD and graduate courses in Copyright Law, Trademark Law, and International Aspects of Intellectual Property, as well as seminars on Intellectual Property Theory and Copyright in the Digital Era.

She researches and publishes in the fields of domestic, comparative and international intellectual property law and policy, with an emphasis on public interest theory and the public domain. Her recently published monograph, Copyright, Communication & Culture: Towards a Relational Theory of Copyright Law (Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Press, 2011) critically examines the assumptions of possessive individualism embedded in modern copyright law. Her award-winning work has been cited with approval by the Supreme Court of Canada.

Dr. Craig holds a First Class Honours Bachelor of Laws (LLB Hons) from the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, a Master of Laws (LLM) from Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, and a Doctorate in Law (SJD) from the University of Toronto, where she was a graduate fellow of the Centre for Innovation Law and Policy.

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Bryan Thomas

Bryan Thomas

Research Fellow, Queen's University Faculty of Law

Bryan Thomas is a Senior Research Fellow with Faculty of Law, Queen's University. His research spans a wide range of topics including Canadian and comparative health law and policy, health rights litigation, long-term care, global health law, the regulation of health AI, and the role of religious argument in legal and political discourse.  Dr. Thomas holds an SJD from University of Toronto, a BCL/LLB from McGill Law, and a Master’s degree in philosophy from Dalhousie.