Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Quebec University Joins Growing Trend Toward Letting Students Use Preferred Names

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Nov, 2018 02:06 PM
  • Quebec University Joins Growing Trend Toward Letting Students Use Preferred Names
MONTREAL — A major Quebec university is joining a growing movement toward allowing students — including transgender students who've long sought the provision — to use a name other than their given name on campus.
 
 
The Universite du Quebec a Montreal announced this week the policy will come into effect next semester. It will extend to all non-official documents and resources, including student cards, university email addresses and the student directory. Professors will address students by their preferred names.
 
 
Their legal first name will continue to appear on official documents such as diplomas, cheques and financial documents.
 
 
"Starting January 4, 2019, in an approach that is inclusive and neutral, UQAM will be the first French-language university in Quebec that will allow, under certain conditions, all students who apply to add a chosen first name to their student file," Danielle Laberge, vice-rector in charge of academic life, told students and staff in a statement.
 
 
Already, about 100 online requests have been made since Monday's announcement, about half of them from transgender students. Other people making requests include foreign students who prefer to go by a different name.
 
 
"For UQAM, it's a policy that's neutral and inclusive and offered to the entire student body," spokeswoman Jenny Desrochers said.
 
 
In allowing a name other than the one that appears on a birth certificate, UQAM follows English-language institutions in Montreal that have instituted similar policies, including Concordia and McGill universities. Several junior colleges in the province also have preferred-name policies, as do numerous post-secondary institutions across the country.
 
 
A group that promotes LGBTQ rights at UQAM and that had pushed for the policy change hailed the announcement as a long-awaited victory.
 
 
"About three years ago, we brought forth the concerns of students who wanted to change their names on their identification cards or other documentation," Roxane Nadeau of the organization La Reclame said. "They were mostly trans students."
 
 
Being thrown into an environment where their preferred name — the name they have come to be known by in all aspects of their lives — was not recognized could be traumatic, she said.
 
 
"They would start at university, (and) it meant taking measures, improvising for each professor, each class, each semester, for their entire university career," she said.
 
 
"It's difficult and victimizes them with each interaction with a teacher to correct a piece of information that shouldn't be used in the first place."
 
 
Desrochers said the policy takes into consideration the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and 2017 federal legislation that provided protections for transgender Canadians.
 
 
She said the university's new rector, Magda Fusaro, made the policy a priority after she arrived in her position in January.
 
 
The university's registrar will have the final say on whether a name is accepted. Certain names would be rejected — such as a disgraced historical figure.
 
 
"The university reserves the right to reject requests judged abusive or eccentric," Desrochers said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Saudi Arabia Expelling Canadian Ambassador And Suspending New Trade With Canada

Saudi Arabia Expelling Canadian Ambassador And Suspending New Trade With Canada
Saudi Arabia said on Sunday that it is ordering Canada's ambassador to leave the country and freezing all new trade and investment transactions with Canada in a spat over human rights.

Saudi Arabia Expelling Canadian Ambassador And Suspending New Trade With Canada

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Spends B.C. Day At Picnic In Penticton, B.C.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Spends B.C. Day At Picnic In Penticton, B.C.
Justin Trudeau celebrated the B.C. Day holiday Monday at a summer picnic in a park with about 3,000 people in Penticton, of whom many wanted to pose for a selfie with the prime minister, while others held placards opposed to the Trans Mountain pipeline.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Spends B.C. Day At Picnic In Penticton, B.C.

Apparently Targeted Stabbing In Surrey, B.C., Leaves One Dead, One Injured

Apparently Targeted Stabbing In Surrey, B.C., Leaves One Dead, One Injured
One man has died and another is injured after what RCMP in Surrey, B.C., say appears to be a targeted knife attack.

Apparently Targeted Stabbing In Surrey, B.C., Leaves One Dead, One Injured

Victim Of Targeted Abbotsford Shooting 19-Yr-Old GAGANDEEP SINGH DHALIWAL Was Known To Police: IHIT

Victim Of Targeted Abbotsford Shooting 19-Yr-Old GAGANDEEP SINGH DHALIWAL Was Known To Police: IHIT
An Abbotsford neighbourhood is the scene of Metro Vancouver's latest brazen deadly shooting. Two young men were rushed to hospital after being shot-- but only one survived. 

Victim Of Targeted Abbotsford Shooting 19-Yr-Old GAGANDEEP SINGH DHALIWAL Was Known To Police: IHIT

Vancouver Records 'Ghastly' Death Count From Suspected Overdoses: Mayor

Vancouver Records 'Ghastly' Death Count From Suspected Overdoses: Mayor
The city says the week of July 23 was the worst on record this year for suspected overdose deaths based on statistics from the police department.

Vancouver Records 'Ghastly' Death Count From Suspected Overdoses: Mayor

More Wildfires Blaze In B.C., But No Communities Seriously Threatened

More Wildfires Blaze In B.C., But No Communities Seriously Threatened
British Columbia's Wildfire Service has had its busiest few days of the season after thousands of lightning strikes sparked hundreds of new fires, but officials say they are relieved that no communities were under threat on Thursday.

More Wildfires Blaze In B.C., But No Communities Seriously Threatened