Paul Seaman
Partner
- Year of Call, Yukon (2017)
- Year of Call, Alberta (2014)
- Year of Call, British Columbia (2015)
- Year of Call, Ontario (2011)
Paul Seaman is a partner at Gowling WLG and national leader of the firm's Indigenous Law Practice Group. He is also a member of the Environmental Law Group.
Working out of the firm's Toronto and Vancouver offices, Paul has a leading national practice and acts on complex constitutional, regulatory, and transactional matters. His Indigenous law practice focuses on projects and transactions where the Crown's duty to consult Indigenous Peoples is engaged. This includes acting for clients in the contexts of formal regulatory processes, and government-to-government and commercial negotiations involving Indigenous communities, industry, and government.
Paul regularly represents Indigenous clients in the courtroom, boardroom, and around the negotiation table across Canada on large scale and high-profile resource development projects, and in related litigation before all levels of court, including the Supreme Court of Canada. The subject matter of those mandates includes mining, oil & gas pipelines, LNG, forestry, and electricity generation and transmission projects. Paul is also regularly engaged by Indigenous communities to advise on complex issues relating to governance, membership, and citizenship.
Since 2019, the Canadian Legal Lexpert Directory has recognized Paul as a top Indigenous law lawyer, including in the Energy, Infrastructure and Mining Special Editions. Paul is also recognized by Chambers Canada in the Aboriginal Law – Representation of Indigenous Peoples category.
Prior to practising law, Paul spent nearly a decade managing a high-speed internet protocol network for one of Canada's largest cable providers. While in this role, he designed the fibre optic network for a school board, assisted in the design of a high-availability commercial metropolitan Voice-over-Internet Protocol (VoIP) network, and consulted with the RCMP on lawful intercept technology.
Paul is Métis, a proud citizen of the Manitoba Métis Federation, and an active member of the Métis community. He carried the torch in the 2010 Olympic torch relay on behalf of the Métis Nation of British Columbia.