Constance Barbara Backhouse, CMOOntFRSC (born February 19, 1952) is a Canadian legal scholar and historian, specializing in gender and race discrimination. She is a Distinguished University Professor and University Research Chair at the Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa in Ottawa, Canada. In addition to her academic publications, Backhouse is the author of several books on feminist- and race-related legal rights topics. Backhouse is President of the American Society for Legal History, and is the first non-US scholar to hold this position.[1]
Backhouse has served as an expert witness and consultant on sexual abuse and violence against women and children. She was the co-author of one of the first books in North America on workplace sexual harassment.[3] She has been an adjudicator for high-profile legal cases for the compensation claims arising from the physical, sexual and psychological abuse of the former inmates of the Grandview Training School for Girls (1995–98), and claims for the former students of Aboriginal residential schools (Canadian Indian residential school system) across Canada.[4]
While a member of the Licensing and Accreditation Task Force of the Law Society of Upper Canada, Constance Backhouse opposed a 2010 recommendation passed by the LSUC regarding a national standard being established for Canadian law schools. Backhouse proposed a regulatory regime based on a "consensual, consultative" approach:
The unintended result of the new mandatory competencies is that the social justice curriculum will suffer. Elective courses in poverty law, access to justice, feminist legal issues, critical race theory, disability law and others already face difficult battles for student enrolment. These important public interest areas of the curriculum will be further impoverished to make way for the growth in the list of mandatory competencies.[6]
Carnal Crimes: Sexual Assault Law in Canada, 1900–1975, Constance Backhouse. Irwin Law: September 2008, 442 pgs. ISBN978-1-55221-151-9
The Heiress Vs The Establishment: Mrs. Campbell's Campaign For Legal Justice (Law & Society), Constance Backhouse and Nancy L. Backhouse. Univ of British Columbia Press: August 30, 2005, 321 pp. ISBN978-0-7748-1053-1
Colour-Coded: A Legal History of Racism in Canada, 1900-1950. Constance Backhouse. University of Toronto Press: November 20, 1999, 432 pp. ISBN978-0-8020-8286-2
Challenging Times: Women's Movements in Canada and the United States. Constance Backhouse. McGill-Queen's University Press: 1992, 335 pp. ISBN978-0-7735-0919-1
The Secret Oppression: Sexual Harassment of Working Women. Constance Backhouse. Macmillan: 1979, 208 pp. ISBN978-0-7705-1789-2
People and Place: Historical Influences on Legal Culture (Law & Society) Jonathan Swainger (Editor), Constance Backhouse (Editor), University of British Columbia Press, 2003, 288 pp. ISBN978-0-7748-1032-6
Petticoats & Prejudice: Women and Law in Nineteenth Century Canada. Constance Backhouse. Women's Press, 1991. 470 pp. ISBN978-0-88961-161-0