Activist Maude Barlow Discusses "Citizen Politics" at Osgoode Hall Law School Memorial Lecture

Share

TORONTO, October 11, 2000 -- Barbara
Betcherman was a shining star, an Ontario Scholar who put herself
through Osgoode Hall Law School of York University, and later served on
a Royal Commission investigating alleged police brutality.

She went on to become director of legal research for CBC-TV's
Ombudsman program and then a successful novelist.

Sadly, on June 13, 1983 at the age of 35, Betcherman was killed
instantly in a traffic accident.

Osgoode Hall Law School, with the support of Betcherman's family and
her many former friends and admirers, continues to honour the memory of
this gifted woman with a lecture series held every other year at the Law
School.

The Tenth Barbara Betcherman Memorial Lecture takes place Wednesday,
October 18, 2000 at 7:30 p.m. in Osgoode's Moot Court Room
.

Members of the public are cordially invited to attend this year's
lecture, which will be given by activist, author and policy critic Maude
Barlow. The topic of Barlow's address is Global Showdown: Citizen
Politics in an Era of Globalization
.

Barlow is the voluntary chairperson of The Council of Canadians, a
non-profit, non-partisan public interest organization supported by
100,000 members. She is the author or co-author of 11 books, and is a
director with the International Forum on Globalization, a network of
individuals and groups from around the world working to take democratic
control of the global economy.

The Barbara Betcherman Memorial Lecture was established in 1985 with
the assistance of The Barbara Betcherman Memorial Lecture Fund. The Fund
seeks to develop and promote, through lectures and public discussion,
ideas about women and the law, including sex equality, feminist theory
and applied legal research in areas of law with a significant impact on
women.

The Lecture has been presented in the past by such notable women as
Gloria Steinem, Margaret Atwood, bell hooks, Catharine MacKinnon, Alanis
Obomsawin, Marilyn Waring, Madam Justice Bertha Wilson, Madam Justice
Rosalie Abella, and by a panel discussion involving June Callwood, Pat
Armstrong, Lorenne Clarke and Carmencita Hernandez.

Osgoode Hall Law School of York University is one of Canada's leading
law schools.

-30-

For further information, please contact:

Virginia Corner
Communications Manager
Osgoode Hall Law School of York University
Tel: (416) 736-5820
E-mail: vcorner@osgoode.yorku.ca

YU/100/00