Anna Lund

Anna Lund is a professor in the Faculty of Law researching and teaching in civil procedure, housing law, insolvency, and debtor-creditor law. Her research interests in constitutional law span the spectrum from how federalism shapes insolvency law to how the right to housing might show up in mortgage enforcement proceedings to how the Charter protects against forced evictions. Recent publications on constitutional law topics include “Wright v Yukon: Safer Communities and Neighbourhoods Legislation and the Charter” with Aubrey Abaya & Vincent LaRochelle (2025) 76 UNB L J 135 and “The Edmonton Encampment Litigation and The Charter Claims We Didn't (Get to) Argue” (2024) 40 Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice 229. Dr. Lund carries on a pro bono practice which has included representing interveners in litigation over the Charter's notwithstanding clause.

Sandrine Ampleman-Tremblay

Sandrine Ampleman-Tremblay is an assistant professor at the University of Alberta Faculty of Law, a position she has held since 2023. She completed her LLB at Laval University, her LLM at the University of Toronto, and her Doctor of Civil Law degree (DCL) at McGill University. Ampleman-Tremblay's research focuses mostly on sexual violence, individual and collective responsibility, and legal rights. Her current project, entitled "Rethinking Legal Narratives & Criminal Responsibility: A Case Study of Extreme Intoxication," is funded by an SSHRC Insight Grant. As demonstrated by some of her recent publications, her interest in legal rights and criminal liability often brings her research to the confluence of criminal and constitutional law.