Tayo is a Ph.D. student with research interests in law and development, international criminal law, human rights, and corporate accountability. He has law and business degrees from Africa, Europe and North America.
Daniel is a Master of Laws student at Allard Law. He conducted research on Canada-Latin America trade and investment relations at SFU. He was previously a legal and business advisor in Brazil.
Temitope is an International Doctoral Fellow, a Liu Scholar and a Vanier Scholar at UBC. Engaging law and society, governance and regulation, and environmental theories, and variously applying policy models, he has worked and published on diverse sustainability areas: climate change and LCEs, renewable energy, SWFs and NRFs, environment versus development, resource governance, etc.
Andrew is a Canadian legal scholar pursuing doctoral studies at Allard Law. His doctoral research programme is in the area of Law & Technology with a focus on Blockchain and Private Commercial Law. His research seeks to answer how common law and equitable tools can be used to provide compensation to victims of fraud effectuated using smart contracts.
Oludolapo Makinde is a doctoral student at the Allard School of Law and a Nigerian-trained corporate lawyer. Her current research lies at the intersection of corporate governance, artificial intelligence and anti-corruption law. She also obtained her LLM degree at Allard Law, and her research involved a comparative analysis of the Nigerian and Canadian corporate governance frameworks. Prior to pursuing graduate studies, she functioned as a Legal Associate at Kenna Partners, a leading law firm in Nigeria, and provided corporate governance advisory services to the firm’s clients.