Volunteer research participants for PhD Study

Posting Date:
Nov 02, 2023
Company/Firm:
Univeristy of Victoria
Area of Law:
all--can participate from anywhere in Canada
Position Type:
90m minute interview
Deadline:
Aug 01, 2024
Location:
any
Experience:
must be law student, law professor, or lawyers (practicing or retired)

Description

Research Participants Needed

The Intersection Between Religious Identity and Legal Practice

My name is Paige Thombs I am a PhD candidate in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria, as well as a recent Osgoode Visiting Scholar at York University. I am writing my dissertation on the relationship between religious identity and the practice of law. As part of my research, I will be conducting 55-65 interviews with lawyers, law professors and law students. The University of Victoria’s Human Research Ethics Board have approved the recruitment and interview process. Interviews will happen at a mutually agreed upon time and will happen in person or via phone, Zoom, or other video platform (e.g., Skype, Bluejeans). Interviews will take approximately 90 minutes but will be scheduled for two hours to allow for more time as needed and to prevent overlap with other interviews.

Very little research has been done in Canada on the practice of religious lawyering. This project aims to fill that gap. The objective of my project is fivefold: 1. to identify and explain the ways in which faith and/or religious identity informs religious lawyering; 2. to understand the ways in which legal professional ethics and religious beliefs, values, and practices might conflict with or complement one another and how religious lawyers/law students navigate these sometimes-challenging waters; 3. to understand, from the perspective of religious lawyers/law students, the place of religion within the secular legal profession and how the secularization of Canada impacts religious lawyers; 4. to understand what special challenges religious lawyers from minority religious groups may face; and 5. to better understand, from the perspective of participants, what religious lawyers offer the broader legal community.

My research uses an intersectional lens and considers how religion intersects with other identities (gender, race, etc.), that may also shape legal practice.

If you are a lawyer (working or retired), law professor (working or emeritus), or a law student, and your religious identity influences/informs part or all of your approach to the law, regardless of the kind of law you practice, I would like to speak to you. My goal is to interview a diverse group of lawyers including a broad range of religious affiliations. This includes but is not limited to: Jewish (including secular Jews), Muslim, Christian, Buddhist, Sikh, and Hindu identified lawyers. I would also be interested in speaking to those who belong to a religious group but feel that one identity has no bearing on the other.

If you are interested in participating or just want to know more about my research, I can be reached at paigethombs@uvic.ca You may also distribute this letter to others as you see fit.

Any concerns regarding this research can be directed to either my supervisor, Dr. Kathryn Chan (kmchan@uvic.ca), or the UVic Human Research Ethics Board (ethics@uvic.ca or 250-472-4545). 

Recruitment will continue until August of 2024.

Apply

Contact Name Paige Thombs

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