番茄社区

Patricia Cochran

Associate Professor

Patricia Cochran

Patricia Cochran


Tel: 250-721-8183

Faculty of Law
番茄社区
PO Box 1700, STN CSC
Victoria, BC  V8W 2Y2
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Dr. Patricia Cochran joined the Faculty of Law, 番茄社区 in 2014, where she has taught constitutional law, legal methodologies, feminist legal theories, statutory interpretation, equality and human rights law and evidence law.   She has received graduate degrees in law and political theory, and continues to teach and research at the intersection of those disciplines.  Her research focuses on theories of judgment as a resource for thinking about the demands of law and justice in the context of pluralism, inequality and colonialism.

Prof. Cochran’s book, Common Sense and Legal Judgment: Community Knowledge, Political Power and Rhetorical Practice (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2017) is a critical and interdisciplinary engagement with questions of judgment, knowledge and rhetoric.  This interest in legal judgment, and particularly its relational aspects, has continued to inform Prof. Cochran’s research.  She is currently exploring these themes in a variety of subject areas including agonistic constitutionalism, technologically mediated legal processes, and multijural statutory interpretation.

  • BA Honours - McGill (1999)
  • MA - U of T (2000)
  • LLB - UBC (2004)
  • LLM - UVic (2006)
  • PhD (Law) - UBC (2013)
  • "" (2023) Social & Legal Studies, online.

  • "(2019) No Foundations: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Law and Justice 28-52.
  • (Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2017).

  • “ by Nicole Roughan” (2017) 29:1 Canadian Journal of Women and the Law 211-215.

  • “” (2011) 19.3 Constitutional Forum 119-124.

  • “” (2007) 40:2 UBC Law Review 559-589.

  • “” (2006) 12:1 Review of Constitutional Studies 203-210.

Prof. Cochran is interested in supervising LLM and PhD students with an interest in legal and political theory and constitutional law. More specifically: theories of judgement, relational approaches to law, multijuralism, technology in legal processes, law and humanities methodologies.