Melissa Kluger - University of Toronto Magazine
University of Toronto Magazine University of Toronto Magazine
Melissa Kluger, LLB 2001
Melissa Kluger.

Melissa Kluger

"The award motivated me to dream up new ideas and take risks" Read More

Fave U of T moment Convocation. My father is a professor at U of T, and he was able to come up on stage for my hooding. It meant a lot to me.

Since graduation After being called to the bar in 2002, I worked as a media lawyer focused on libel and freedom of expression work. After a few years, I left private practice to launch a magazine. In 2007, I published the first issue of Precedent: The new rules of law and style, a law and lifestyle magazine for young lawyers in Ontario. We publish the magazine quarterly and send it free to more than 20,000 lawyers and law students in the province. We also run a website at lawandstyle.ca that attracts thousands of visitors each month.

Your dream? I want to see my magazine grow and expand. I have so many ideas and can’t wait to turn them into reality. The more the magazine grows, the more opportunities I will have to hire local journalists and artists – and that’s important to me.

Are you doing now what you thought you’d be doing when you attended U of T? While at Faculty of Law, I started an independent student newspaper. I was really interested in reporting on the events in my community and providing a forum for students to learn more about one another. I had no idea I would go on to start a magazine for lawyers, but in hindsight, it makes a lot of sense.

What has winning the Gordon Cressy Award meant to you? It was a real confidence boost. It motivated me to continue to dream up new ideas and take risks.

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Over the years, Canada’s vast geography and diverse communities have given rise to a variety of unique words and expressions. For more than 20 years, Sali Tagliamonte, a University of Toronto professor of linguistics, and her research team have been exploring Ontario’s linguistic diversity, from cities to smaller centres… Read More

Prof. Kristen Bos wearing a long-sleeved, black and white flower patterned dress and large purple clover-shaped earrings, facing off camera, with a glass and concrete building and a grassy hill in the background

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Prof. Kristen Bos investigates how pollution has affected – and continues to affect – Indigenous communities Read More

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