| Canada's Influence on International Law |
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The CCIL's founding president, Judge Ronald St. John Macdonald (1928-2006), had a great interest in biographical studies of individual figures important to the development of international law in Canada. He published a number of articles on leading figures in the Canadian Yearbook of International Law:
In addition, his four-part article "A Historical Introduction to the Teaching of International Law in Canada", also published in the Yearbook, includes many references and sources useful to the historical study of individuals who played important roles in the development of international law teaching in Canada (see In 2004 Judge Macdonald wrote to his former student Karen Knop at the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto to discuss ways to encourage law students to take up this kind of biographical and historical research. In response, Professor Knop and her legal history colleague, Angela Fernandez, created a seminar course called "Canadian Approaches to International Law". In the course, each student chose a figure in the history of international law in Canada to research, and wrote a paper describing and assessing that person's contribution to the development of the teaching or practice of international law in Canada.
Links are provided here to a selection of these papers written in 2005-2006 and 2006-2007. The selection includes: two papers on the early Quebec law teacher Maximilien Bibaud written by Britt Braaten and Adam Shevell; a paper on the early nineteenth century Nova Scotia admiralty court judge, Alexander Croke, by Rachel Kent; a paper on Ontario's David Mills by Claire Young; a paper on Wolfgang Friedmann, focusing on the years he spent at the University of Toronto, by Sarah McEachern; and a paper on the founder of the Institute of Air and Space Law at McGill University, John Cobb Cooper, by Agape Lim.
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Canada's Influence on International Law 
