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Articles 1 - 13 of 13
Full-Text Articles in Law
Introducing The Self-Represented Litigant Case Law Database, Julie Macfarlane, Sandra Shushani, Lidia Imbrogno
Introducing The Self-Represented Litigant Case Law Database, Julie Macfarlane, Sandra Shushani, Lidia Imbrogno
Law Publications
The Self-Represented Litigant (SRL) Case Law Database Project began in January of 2017 and is the newest work-in-progress of the National Self-Represented Litigants Project. Our goal is to track the developing jurisprudence across Canada in cases that relate to and affect the positions of individuals appearing unrepresented.
Digital Locks, Physical Objects And Immaterial Works, Pascale Chapdelaine
Digital Locks, Physical Objects And Immaterial Works, Pascale Chapdelaine
Law Publications
One of the greatest controversies in contemporary copyright law is the introduction of technological protection measures (TPMs) at the international and national level. By creating a separate parallel regime for digital copyright works, TPMs shifted the paradigm by redefining the rules of engagement of how users would increasingly access and experience digital copyright works.
In this chapter of my book Copyright User Rights, Contracts, and the Erosion of Property (Oxford University Press, 2017) I look at the implementation of TPMs as a regulatory tool from a multi-jurisdictional perspective. Initially mainly intended to protect copyright holders’ works made accessible online or …
Equitable Allocation Of Climate Adaptation Finance - Considering Income Levels Alongside Vulnerability, Patricia Galvao-Ferreira
Equitable Allocation Of Climate Adaptation Finance - Considering Income Levels Alongside Vulnerability, Patricia Galvao-Ferreira
Law Publications
The 2015 Paris Agreement elevates the goal of climate adaptation to the same level of importance as the goal of climate mitigation, and emphasizes the need to mobilize finance for climate adaptation in developing countries. As of February 2017, however, the financial gap for climate adaptation remained monumental. With the administration of US President Donald Trump threatening to interrupt American financial flows to the climate regime, developing countries are expressing growing concern about the ability of developed country parties to mobilize enough finance to meet the sizeable costs of their climate adaptation needs. In this context, the question of how …
Creating An Anti-Corruption Norm In Africa: Critical Reflections On Legal Instrumentalization For Development, Paul D. Ocheje
Creating An Anti-Corruption Norm In Africa: Critical Reflections On Legal Instrumentalization For Development, Paul D. Ocheje
Law Publications
Abstract
This article reflects critically on the instrumental value of law in the anti-corruption struggle in Africa. Three questions are central to this reflection: (a) Is the instrumental use of law to achieve a developmental purpose, such as anti-corruption, defensible in theory and practice? (b) Is law necessary to, and/or adequate for, the creation of an anti-corruption norm? (c) Why do the developing countries perform so poorly in the fight against corruption in comparison with their wealthier, industrialized counterparts? While the article defends the instrumentalization of law in this regard, it argues that the African normative context of corruption throws …
Evaluating Systemic Advocacy: A Primer & Tools For Evaluating Systemic Advocacy In Ontario's Legal Clinics, Gemma Smyth
Evaluating Systemic Advocacy: A Primer & Tools For Evaluating Systemic Advocacy In Ontario's Legal Clinics, Gemma Smyth
Law Publications
No abstract provided.
Part Three Child And Family Services Act Table Of Concordance With Bill C-89, Lois Boateng
Part Three Child And Family Services Act Table Of Concordance With Bill C-89, Lois Boateng
Law Publications
Bill 89, Supporting Children, Youth and Families Act, 2017, (41st Parl, 2nd Sess) Ontario (2017)
Table of Concordance between Part III (Child Protection) of the Child and Family Services Act and Part V (Child Protection) of Bill C-89, An Act to enact the Child, Youth and Family Services Act, 2016, to amend and repeal the Child and Family Services Act and to make related amendments to other Acts.
Contents
Interpretation- Definitions. 3
Child in Need of Protection. 4
Best Interests of Child. 5
Where child an Indian or native person. 6
Place of Safety. 6
Temporary …
A Third Revolution In Family Dispute Resolution: Accessible Legal Professionalism, Noel Semple
A Third Revolution In Family Dispute Resolution: Accessible Legal Professionalism, Noel Semple
Law Publications
Innovation in family law firms can tangibly improve access to justice in Canada. This article develops that claim by drawing on empirical data and scholarship about Canadian family law. Part 1 explains how and why legal needs arising from the dissolution of intimate relationships are so difficult for the parties to meet. This Part draws on civil legal needs surveys, surveys with lawyers, and data from interviews with litigants. The focus shifts to family law firms (including sole practitioners) in Part 2, using new empirical data about the Canadian lawyers who do this work. Three promising opportunities to innovate for …
Male, Pale, And Stale? Diversity In Lawyers' Regulatory Leadership, Noel Semple
Male, Pale, And Stale? Diversity In Lawyers' Regulatory Leadership, Noel Semple
Law Publications
When lawyers elect the leaders of their self-regulatory organizations, what sort of people do they vote for? How do the selection processes for elite lawyer sub-groups affect the diversity and efficacy of those groups? This article quantitatively assesses the demographic and professional diversity of leadership in the Law Society of Upper Canada.
After many years of underrepresentation, in 2015 visible minority members and women were elected in numbers proportionate to their shares of Ontario lawyers. Regression analysis suggests that being non-white was not a disadvantage in the 2015 election, and being female actually conferred an advantage in attracting lawyers’ votes. …
Top Heavy: Beyond The Global North & The Justification For Global Administrative Law, Sujith Xavier
Top Heavy: Beyond The Global North & The Justification For Global Administrative Law, Sujith Xavier
Law Publications
Global administrative law scholars have argued that global administrative law’s principles and normativity can bring about legitimacy to global governance institutions, and subsequently benefit the people of the Global South. I challenge these recent arguments that suggest global administrative law has managed to incorporate the concerns of the Third World. I caution international lawyers’ attempts to theorize global governance as administration to fill the democracy gap within the global space. My arguments are premised on the history of domestic administrative law and its uses to facilitate the settler colonial project in places like North America. I first examine the two …
Questions, Questions: Has Weber Had An Impact On Unions’ Representational Responsibilities In Workplace Human Rights Disputes?, Claire Mummé
Questions, Questions: Has Weber Had An Impact On Unions’ Representational Responsibilities In Workplace Human Rights Disputes?, Claire Mummé
Law Publications
This essay attempts to put forward a research agenda for properly evaluating the changing nature of unions’ human rights representational obligations since Weber. I begin by investigating two legal questions: first, whether unions are held to a more stringent duty of fair representation (DFR) standard in regards to members’ discrimination grievances than prior to Weber and Parry Sound, and second, whether there has been a broadening of the concept of union discrimination under human rights codes, such that unions may be held liable for failing to bring forward discrimination grievances. With the legal picture in place, I then set out …
Placing Twail Scholarship And Praxis, Sujith Xavier, Amar Bhatia, Usha Natarajan, John Reynolds
Placing Twail Scholarship And Praxis, Sujith Xavier, Amar Bhatia, Usha Natarajan, John Reynolds
Law Publications
This Special Issue of the Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice collects some of the written reflections of participants from the Third World Approaches to International Law [TWAIL] Conference held in Cairo, Egypt, from 21 to 24 February 2015. TWAIL is a loosely affiliated network of scholars and practitioners of international law and policy. TWAIL scholars and practitioners are animated by the relationship between the Global North and the Global South, and the ensuing disparities in wealth and health spurred on by processes of diverging and converging colonial and postcolonial histories.
Norms, Law And Social Change: Nigeria’S Anti-Corruptionstruggle, 1999–2017, Paul Ocheje
Norms, Law And Social Change: Nigeria’S Anti-Corruptionstruggle, 1999–2017, Paul Ocheje
Law Publications
Corruption is notoriously persistent in Nigeria notwithstanding the panoply of laws deployed over the years against it. This article argues that the factors constraining the effectiveness of laws in the fight against corruption are to be found not in the laws, but in the larger societal matrix of resilient social norms and institutions, which constitute the environment of corruption in the country. The environment thus constituted is either conducive to, or largely tolerant of, corruption. The article then suggests that the anti-corruption effort, to be successful, must engage broadly with the environment by instigating social change.
Legal Services Regulation In Canada: Plus Ça Change?, Noel Semple
Legal Services Regulation In Canada: Plus Ça Change?, Noel Semple
Law Publications
In common law Northern Europe and in Australasia, a wave of reform has been transforming legal services regulation since roughly 1980. Old structures and approaches, based on the principles of professionalism and lawyer independence, are being replaced in these jurisdictions by new ones that prioritize competition and consumer interests. In the United States this has conspicuously not happened, leaving intact a regulatory approach whose broad outlines have changed little in the past 100 years.
Thus, I have argued that the legal services regulatory regimes of the common law world today are bifurcated into (i) a competitive-consumerist paradigm apparent in the …