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Michelle O鈥橞onsawin
Michelle O鈥橞onsawin
Doctoral student

Faculty of Law
University of Ottawa



Biography

Madam Justice Michelle O鈥橞onsawinis an Abenaki member of the Odanak First Nation, Qu茅bec, and the first Indigenous judge named to the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in Ottawa. She is originally from Hanmer in the Sudbury region, perfectly bilingual and actively learning her Abenaki language.

Prior to joining the Superior Court of Justice, Madam Justice O鈥橞onsawin was General Counsel at the Royal Ottawa Health Care Group and previously Counsel at the  Canada  Post  Corporation. She practiced in the areas of mental health, labour, employment, human rights and privacy law. She has also taught the course Les autochtones et le droit part-time at the University of Ottawa.

Madam Justice O鈥橞onsawin received her LL.B. from the French Common Law Program at the University of Ottawa and her LL.M. (Thesis: Treatment Orders in the Mental Health Context 鈥 Do They Really Work?) at Osgoode Hall in 2014. She is currently completing her PhD (Thesis: A Principled Approach: Mandatory Application of the Gladue Principles at Review Board Hearings) at the University of Ottawa.

Madam Justice O鈥橞onsawin continues to be very active in the legal community. She is currently a Board member of the Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice and was a member of the University of Ottawa鈥檚 Board of Governors and a Board member of the Aboriginal Legal Services of the University of Ottawa Legal Aid Clinic.

Madam Justice O鈥橞onsawin is Chair of the Education Committee and a member of the Technology Committee of the Canadian Superior Court Judges鈥 Association. She is Chair of the Ontario Justice Education Network in Ottawa, member of the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Committee of the Superior Court of Justice of Ontario and a member of the organizing committees for national conferences. She also acts as a mentor to lawyers and law students.

Madam Justice O鈥橞onsawin is a frequent guest speaker regarding issues of mental health law and Gladue principles. She has been a guest speaker at conferences held by the Association des juristes d鈥檈xpression fran莽aise de l鈥橭ntario, the Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice, the National Judicial Institute, the Action Committee on Access to Justice in Civil and Family Matters, the University of Ottawa and the County of Carleton Law Association.

Madam Justice O鈥橞onsawin has many publications such as:

  • Access to Justice and Gladue Reports: We All Have a Role to Play in Lawyer鈥檚 Daily (2020)
  • A Principled Approach: Applying Gladue Principles at the Ontario Review Board in the National Judicial Institute Indigenous Law Subject Collection (2018)
  • Canada鈥檚 Bill C-14 [NCR] A Knee Jerk Reaction to Sensationalized Not Criminally Responsible Cases in the Canadian Criminal Law Review (2016)
  • Mental Health Checklist: A Guide for Members of the Judiciary (2016).

In 2019, Madam Justice O鈥橞onsawin was inducted into the University of Ottawa鈥檚 Common Law Honour Society. She was nominated for the Laura Legge award in 2017 and profiled in T锚te 脿 T锚te 鈥 Improving Understanding in the Nation鈥檚 Courtrooms in 2016. In 2013, she was awarded the Rising Star Award by Lexpert Magazine, recognizing her as one of Canada鈥檚 leading lawyers under 40. She was also recognized as a leading businesswoman by Canada Post Corporation on International Woman鈥檚 Day in 2008.