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Dal Law announces inaugural Emerging Leader Impact Award

The 最新杏吧原创 Law Alumni Association's new award honours a remarkable alum who merges outstanding professional achievements with a significant commitment to the community. Emilie Coyle (JD鈥14) is the inaugural recipient.

笔辞蝉迟别诲:听October 7, 2024

叠测:听Amanda Kirby-Sheppard

Harding and Coyle pose together with the framed certificate at the event. Schulich Law Dean Sarah Harding and Emilie Coyle.

罢丑别听最新杏吧原创 Law Alumni Association听(顿尝础础)听Emerging Leader Impact Award聽was established this year to recognize the exceptional accomplishments of an alum who has graduated from the Schulich School of Law within the past decade.

Reflecting the law school鈥檚 commitment to fostering a community of excellence and inspiration, the new award honours a remarkable graduate who embodies the esteemed values of the Weldon Tradition of unselfish public service, seamlessly merging outstanding professional achievements with a significant commitment to the community.

The inaugural recipient, Emilie Coyle (JD鈥14), is described by her former classmates as 鈥渨arm and welcoming, open and non-judgemental, a calm in the turbulent waters of legal education.鈥

Aaron Dewitt (JD鈥14), James Foy (JD鈥14), Caitlin Urquhart (JD鈥14) and Amanda Whitehead (JD鈥14), classmates of Coyle, nominated her. They believe she truly embodies the Weldon Tradition through her commitment to social justice and by living those values through her work, volunteerism and advocacy.

Coming to Schulich Law later in life with years of work experience and a young family, Coyle knew why she was at law school and what she was hoping to gain.

鈥淗er leadership style is welcoming, open, caring and full of compassion,鈥 they share. 鈥淚n class, she was practical and never afraid to challenge conventional wisdom or the status quo, especially when she saw that it did not align with her moral compass or would further oppress or marginalize vulnerable communities.鈥

Her community building at Schulich Law resulted in her selection as valedictorian in 2014, where she delivered, in her nominators鈥 words, 鈥渁 spoken word masterpiece we will never forget,鈥澛

鈥淐ommunity involvement and community building are at the core of all of the work and volunteerism that I have been involved with over the years,鈥 says Coyle. 鈥淲hat appeals to me about that work is the collective drive to create a world where everyone has what they need, and everyone can find their place.鈥

After graduating, Coyle articled and worked in private practice in Dartmouth, before moving to Ottawa with her family to join the YMCA-YWCA as senior director of newcomer services. Eventually, she moved on to the role of director of national programs at the Refugee Hub while also teaching refugee law at the University of Ottawa.

In addition to supporting refugees and newcomers, she has been a long-time ally and advocate of the 2SLGBTQ+ community. In her volunteer work, she has supported several Rainbow Refugees, those fleeing persecution due to their sexual orientation or gender expression, and has spoken out against protests at drag story time in her neighbourhood.

鈥淓milie has a great skill for hard conversations, for holding people and institutions accountable with grace and for holding space for conflict and disagreement without ever losing sight of her values,鈥 say her former classmates.

Her passion to give back led her to run for Ottawa City Council in 2018 and while she did not unseat the incumbent candidate, she raised awareness about many issues impacting vulnerable members of her community and inspired and energized new voters and volunteers.

Two years later she was selected as the executive director of聽, replacing now-Senator Kim Pate (鈥84). In this role she demonstrated her skills as an advocate with numerous appearances before parliamentary committees, authoring articles in a variety of publications and sitting on many panel discussions on issues such as solitary confinement, bail reform, housing and the overrepresentation of Indigenous women in federal prisons.

鈥淓milie has proven that a law degree is not solely a gateway to the practice of law but can lead to the pursuit of a better world,鈥 say her nominators. 鈥淪he鈥檚 an inspiration to all who come to know her.鈥

Coyle is grateful to her classmates for the recognition. 鈥淭his award is shared with them and with everyone who leads in their own big or small ways, as this world requires us all to work together."