Suzanne Chiodo

Suzanne Chiodo is a doctoral candidate in Law at Oriel College, Oxford University. She also completed her undergraduate degree in Modern History at Oxford.

Before beginning her doctorate in October 2017, Suzanne was a class actions lawyer at Rochon Genova LLP in Toronto. She completed her LLM in December 2016, supported by funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) and numerous other sources. Her book The Class Actions Controversy arises from her LLM thesis on the history of the Ontario Class Proceedings Act.

Suzanne has taught courses on civil procedure at Osgoode Hall Law School, and has presented papers to the Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History, the Ontario Bar Association and the Ontario Human Rights Commission. In addition, she has published numerous papers on class actions and tort law.

Suzanne completed her articles of clerkship for the Honourable Mr Justice O’Reilly at the Federal Court. She obtained her JD with Distinction at Western Law, where she spearheaded a successful effort to establish the school’s first student-run academic journal. She received the Law Society of Upper Canada prize for graduating near the top of her class at Western, and also won numerous awards and scholarships for academic excellence, including the JSD Tory Writing Award for original historical research on the international law of occupation that she conducted with Rande Kostal.

 

 

 

 

Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History Books

The Class Actions Controversy: The Origins and Development of the Ontario Class Proceedings Act (Toronto: Osgoode Society and Irwin Law, 2018), 271 pp.

Other Legal History Publications

“Class Actions: History and Purpose” in Janet Walker (ed), Class Actions: Cases, Notes and Materials (Emond Montgomery 2018)

 

“Class Roots: The Genesis of the Ontario Class Proceedings Act” (2018) 13:2 Canadian Class Action Review