Professor Langer is prairie-born and raised. She began her teaching career under the sunny skies of Saskatchewan where she taught at Univ. of Sask and Univ. of Regina for several years before returning to school and obtaining her PH.D. at Osgoode Hall Law School, Toronto. Dr. Langer has worked as a consultant in the fields of human rights, domestic violence, female offenders, and the sex trades. She is currently Vice-Chair of the Laurentian University Research Ethics Board and a member of the Board of Directors of the John Howard Society. She has taught in the Laurentian University Law & Justice Department since 2003, and now loves the beauty of the near-north region of Ontario.
Dr. Langer teaches a variety of courses across the Law & Justice programme, including Public Law, Interpersonal Dispute Resolution, Law and Popular Culture, Women in Conflict with the Law, Themes in Criminal Law and Advanced Topics in Criminal Justice Theory. She has particular interests in gender and the law, privacy law and new technologies, and law and mental illness. Her current research focus combines several of these interests, as she pursues a multidisciplinary research agenda about mental disorders, gender and the law. Her recent scholarship interrogates the impact of gendered conceptualizations of mental disorder on legal liability, culpability, guilt, risk and punishment.