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Full-Text Articles in Law

Benefit Adequacy In State And Provincial Workers' Compensation Programs, H. Allan Hunt, Marcus Dillender Dec 2014

Benefit Adequacy In State And Provincial Workers' Compensation Programs, H. Allan Hunt, Marcus Dillender

H. Allan Hunt

No abstract provided.


Self-Employed Workers Organize: Law, Policy, And Unions, Cynthia Cranford, Judy Fudge, Eric Tucker, Leah Vosko Jul 2014

Self-Employed Workers Organize: Law, Policy, And Unions, Cynthia Cranford, Judy Fudge, Eric Tucker, Leah Vosko

Eric M. Tucker

Over a million self-employed Canadians work every day but many of them not entitled to the basic labour protections and rights such as minimum wages, maternity and parental leaves and benefits, pay equity, a safe and healthy working environment, and access to collective bargaining. The authors of Self-Employed Workers Organize offer a multi-disciplinary examination of the legal, political, and social realities that both limit collective action by self-employed workers and create huge impediments for unions attempting to organize them. Through case studies of newspaper carriers, rural route mail couriers, personal care workers, and freelance editors - four groups who have …


Constitutional Labour Rights In Canada: Farm Workers And The Fraser Case, Fay Faraday, Judy Fudge, Eric Tucker Jul 2014

Constitutional Labour Rights In Canada: Farm Workers And The Fraser Case, Fay Faraday, Judy Fudge, Eric Tucker

Eric M. Tucker

On 29 April 2011, the Supreme Court of Canada released its much-anticipated decision in Attorney General of Ontario v Fraser, which dealt with the scope of constitutional protection of collective bargaining. The case involved a constitutional challenge to an Ontario statute on the grounds that it violated agricultural workers’ freedom of association and right to equality by excluding them from the statutory protection that is available to virtually all other private sector workers and by failing to provide them with alternative legislative support for meaningful and effective collective bargaining rights. Although the Court upheld the constitutionality of the legislation …


Street Railway Strikes, Collective Violence, And The Canadian State, 1886-1914, Eric Tucker Jul 2014

Street Railway Strikes, Collective Violence, And The Canadian State, 1886-1914, Eric Tucker

Eric M. Tucker

Street railway strikes in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were often accompanied by high levels of public disorder. The challenge to public authorities, however, was not just in the scale of the disorder but also the disjuncture between the behaviour that a significant portion of the working-class community felt was legitimate in the circumstances and what the law tolerated. Public officials confronted with this dilemma had to negotiate between the disparate zones of community and legal toleration. How much disorder would they tolerate before mobilizing the coercive power of the state to protect the right of the street …


Labour Before The Law: The Regulation Of Workers' Collective Action In Canada, 1900-1948, Judy Fudge, Eric Tucker Jul 2014

Labour Before The Law: The Regulation Of Workers' Collective Action In Canada, 1900-1948, Judy Fudge, Eric Tucker

Eric M. Tucker

In this groundbreaking study of the relations between workers and the state, Judy Fudge and Eric Tucker examine the legal regulation of workers' collective action from 1900 to 1948. They analyze the strikes, violent confrontations, lockouts, union organizing drives, legislative initiatives, and major judicial decisions that transformed the labour relations regime of liberal voluntarism, which prevailed in the later part of the nineteenth century, into industrial voluntarism, whose centrepiece was Mackenzie King's Industrial Disputes Investigation Act of 1907. This period was marked by coercion and compromise, as workers organized and fought to extend their rights against the profit oriented owners …


Work On Trial: Canadian Labour Law Struggles, Judy Fudge, Eric Tucker Jul 2014

Work On Trial: Canadian Labour Law Struggles, Judy Fudge, Eric Tucker

Eric M. Tucker

Work on Trial is a collection of studies of eleven major cases and events that have helped to shape the legal landscape of work in Canada. While most of the cases are well-known because of the impact they have had on collective bargaining, individual employment law, or human rights, less is known about the social and political contexts in which the cases arose, the backgrounds and personalities of the judges and the litigants, the legal manoeuvres that were employed, or the ultimate fate of all those who were involved. These studies, written by some of Canada’s leading labour and legal …


Layers Of Vulnerability In Occupational Health And Saftey For Migrant Workers: Case Studies From Canada And The United Kingdom, Malcolm Sargeant, Eric Tucker Jul 2014

Layers Of Vulnerability In Occupational Health And Saftey For Migrant Workers: Case Studies From Canada And The United Kingdom, Malcolm Sargeant, Eric Tucker

Eric M. Tucker

In many high-income countries, like Canada and the United Kingdom, there has recently been a significant increase in the number of migrant workers entering and participating in their labour markets. This article is concerned with the implications of this phenomenon for protective labour laws and, in particular, for occupational health and safety regulation. We identify a framework for assessing the OHS vulnerabilities of migrant workers, using a layered approach which assists in identifying the risk factors. Using this layer of vulnerability framework, we compare the situation of at-risk migrant workers in Canada and the United Kingdom.


Property On Trial: Canadian Cases In Context, James Muir, Eric Tucker, Bruce Ziff Jul 2014

Property On Trial: Canadian Cases In Context, James Muir, Eric Tucker, Bruce Ziff

Eric M. Tucker

Property on Trial is a collection of 14 studies of Canadian property law disputes — some well-known, some more obscure — that have helped to shape the contours of the principles and rules of property law over 150 years. These studies, written by some of Canada's leading legal historians, range in time from a discussion of a nineteenth-century dispute over the ownership of seal pelts in Newfoundland to modern questions of what constitutes private property in a digital age. They investigate the relationship between private and public interests in property; the limits of private property owners' rights in relation to …


Canadian Constitutional Law, Fourth Edition, Patrick Macklem, Carol Rogerson, Joel Bakan, Jean Leclair, John Borrows, Ian Lee, Sujit Choudhry, Richard Moon, Robin Elliot, R. C. B. Risk, Jean-François Gaudreault-Desbiens, Kent Roach, Donna Greschner, Bruce Ryder, Patricia Hughes, David Schneiderman, Lorraine Weinrib Jun 2014

Canadian Constitutional Law, Fourth Edition, Patrick Macklem, Carol Rogerson, Joel Bakan, Jean Leclair, John Borrows, Ian Lee, Sujit Choudhry, Richard Moon, Robin Elliot, R. C. B. Risk, Jean-François Gaudreault-Desbiens, Kent Roach, Donna Greschner, Bruce Ryder, Patricia Hughes, David Schneiderman, Lorraine Weinrib

Sujit Choudhry

In its 4th edition, Canadian Constitutional Law continues to offer a truly national perspective — drawing on an editorial team that is rich with regional, linguistic, and scholarly diversity. This edition remains true to the structure and purposes of previous editions, especially with regard to the editors’ commitment to the idea that understanding constitutional history is critical to comprehending the present and future of Canadian constitutional law.


Choice Of Law, Forum Non Conveniens And Immovables: Recent Perspectives In Canada, Aliamisse O. Mundulai Mr. Feb 2014

Choice Of Law, Forum Non Conveniens And Immovables: Recent Perspectives In Canada, Aliamisse O. Mundulai Mr.

ALIAMISSE O. MUNDULAI

CHOICE OF LAW, FORUM NON CONVENIENS AND IMMOVABLES: RECENT PERSPECTIVES IN CANADA

The traditional choice of law rule in relation to proprietary or possessory interests in real property or immovable is the law of the lex situs. The courts in common law jurisdictions have historically adopted the view that matters concerning the determination of property interests, freehold or leaseholds, will be governed by the law of the place where the property is located.

The lex situs principle which evolved from the House of Lords decision of British South Africa Company v. Companhia de Moçambique has been the guiding principle …


Respecting Democratic Constitutional Change, Craig M. Scott Dec 2013

Respecting Democratic Constitutional Change, Craig M. Scott

Craig M. Scott

The present paper comments on the author's Canadian House of Commons private member's Bill C-470, An Act Respecting Democratic Constitutional Change, introduced in February 2013 as an alternative to the federal Clarity Act by the author in his capacity as Member of Parliament for Toronto-Danforth and Official Opposition Critic for Democratic Reform. It is an edited version of a lecture delivered at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law in March 2013 and of a paper presented at a seminar at Glendon College, York University, in January 2014. The focus of the paper is the law, politics and policy around …