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Introducing the 2025 Bertha Wilson Honour Society inductees

Each year, the Bertha Wilson Honour Society recognizes Schulich Law’s extraordinary alumni and showcases their geographic reach and contributions to law and society.

Posted: November 18, 2025

By: Amanda Kirby-Sheppard

The Honourable Justice Bertha Wilson (LLB'57).

The Bertha Wilson Honour Society was established in 2012 to recognize Schulich Law’s extraordinary alumni and showcase their geographic reach and contributions to law and society.

The Society is named for the Honourable Madam Justice Bertha Wilson (LLB’57) — the first woman appointed to the Ontario Court of Appeal and the first female Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada.

We are delighted to introduce this year’s Bertha Wilson Honour Society inductees.

As one of Canada’s foremost voices in legal ethics, Cotter is often described as a founder of the field in this country. His teaching, scholarship, and leadership with the Canadian Association for Legal Ethics established a framework that has shaped how lawyers, judges, and law schools approach professional responsibility.

Cotter devoted more than a decade to public service in Saskatchewan, serving as Deputy Minister of Justice, Deputy Attorney General, and later in portfolios including Intergovernmental and Aboriginal Affairs and Municipal Affairs.

In 2020, he was appointed to the Senate of Canada for Saskatchewan, where he served until December 2024, when he reached the mandatory retirement age of 75. As chair of the Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs and vice-chair of the Committee on Ethics and Conflict of Interest, Cotter also championed the creation of the Canada Disability Benefit, a landmark piece of legislation aimed at reducing poverty and promoting dignity for persons with disabilities. 

In 2021, Oldfield took on the challenge of becoming president and CEO of Nova Scotia Health at a time when the health system was under immense strain due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Bringing her vision and determination, she worked tirelessly to modernize the system, improve access to care, and support health professionals and patients across the province.

Oldfield has served on numerous national and international boards, advised governments, and represented Canada on the global stage. She has championed innovation, inclusion, and fairness in every space she has entered, and has been a mentor and role model throughout her career, especially for women in law, business, and leadership. She empowers others by leading with courage, integrity, and a clear commitment to the public good.

Guided always by the principles of fairness, dignity, and justice, she has also contributed her expertise to boards and commissions, including the Human Rights Commission of Newfoundland and Labrador and the Inuvialuit Arbitration Board.

White’s dedication has been recognized nationally with the Governor General’s Award in Commemoration of the Persons Case for advancing gender equality and the Gordon M. Stirling Distinguished Service Award for her work in human rights.

In the Senate, she has continued her lifelong commitment to advocacy, lending her voice to issues of reconciliation, equity, and inclusion. White has inspired the next generation of Indigenous leaders, showing what is possible through perseverance, vision, and commitment to community. Â