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New law student grateful for the foundation TWU provided

Jessie Legaree (BA 2010, MA 2012) never expected to attend Trinity Western University. Although she grew up minutes away from TWU’s campus, she initially had her sights set on other universities. Yet, when her mother persuaded her to attend a TWU View Day, she began to reconsider. “I loved the atmosphere, and I loved the students,” she said, recalling that the inviting community far exceeded her expectations.

Not long after View Day, Legaree was selected as one of the first students to attend Access Ottawa, a TWU program that sent high school students on a weeklong trip to its Laurentian Leadership Centre (LLC) in the nation’s capital. “After I completed that program,” she said, “I knew that I wanted to attend TWU, and I couldn’t wait for another opportunity to study at the LLC.” In Fall 2009, she returned for an undergraduate semester in the Laurentian Leadership Program and interned in the Policy Division of the Prime Minister’s Office.

Now, after six years of study, Jessie has earned not one but two degrees at TWU: a BA in Political Science and an MA in Interdisciplinary Humanities (MAIH). She had planned to go directly into law school after completing her bachelor’s degree, but the influence of two professors—Robynne Healey, Ph.D., and Grant Havers, Ph.D.—drew her to participate in the MAIH program. “I thought it would be a really good opportunity to just understand issues better and to study them through a biblical lens,” she said, noting that the program has broadened her perspective while allowing her to pursue more specific interests.

In addition to her studies, Jessie has devoted a significant amount of time to political efforts. Not only has she participated in political clubs on campus, but she has also volunteered for local Members of Parliament since high school and even served as the assistant to the Conservative Party’s BC Regional Manager during the last federal election. And this work has not gone unnoticed; she was included this past April in a Maclean’s feature titled “Canadians under 25,” which highlighted some of Canada’s already influential young men and women. 

This month, Jessie begins her law degree at the University of Toronto. She’s excited to learn more about constitutional law and to seize the new opportunities that will surely come her way. As she moves east, she remains grateful for the foundation that TWU has provided her and looks forward to seeing the outcome of the university’s recent law school proposal. “I have absolutely no doubt that a Faculty of Law at TWU would equip students with the tools necessary to be highly competent, successful lawyers, and ambassadors of a higher justice,” she said.