Book Review: Big Data
Slaw Magazine
by Canadian Association of Law Libraries
1d ago
Several times each month, we are pleased to republish a recent book review from the Canadian Law Library Review (CLLR). CLLR is the official journal of the Canadian Association of Law Libraries (CALL/ACBD), and its reviews cover both practice-oriented and academic publications related to the law. Big Data. Edited by Benoit Leclerc & Jesse Cale. Abingdon: Routledge, 2020. 148 p. Includes illustrations, bibliographic references, and index. Criminology at the Edge series. ISBN 9781138492783 (hardcover) $136.00; ISBN 9781032336992 (softcover) $42.36; ISBN 9781351029704 (eBook) $42.36. Reviewe ..read more
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Governance Reform and Lawyer Independence in Canadian Legal Regulation: Examining British Columbia’s Bill 21
Slaw Magazine
by Jordan Furlong
2d ago
Earlier this month, the government of British Columbia introduced Bill 21, the Legal Professions Act. This bill amalgamates the Law Society of British Columbia and the Society of Notaries Public of British Columbia into a new corporation, Legal Professions British Columbia (LPBC), while also creating a licensing and regulation structure for paralegals. It could be the most consequential development in Canadian legal regulation in more than 100 years. The British Columbia legal profession’s leading organizations (the Law Society, the Canadian Bar Association’s BC branch, and the Trial Lawyers ..read more
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Effective Use of Visual Aids in Mediation
Slaw Magazine
by Guest Blogger
3d ago
The use of demonstrative or visual aids at mediation is more widely accepted by lawyers and mediators since the legal profession began its rapid embrace of technology. Arguably, the pandemic accelerated this implementation. The technology adoption started with the exchange of electronic mediation briefs, improved access to scanned documents, and the use of video software, like Zoom and Teams. Now, counsel more commonly use Power Point or slides and electronic documentation in their introductory remarks, and present demonstrative aids in their Mediation Briefs to bolster arguments by visual c ..read more
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BC Court of Appeal Recognizes the Myth of False Allegations of Intimate Partner Violence
Slaw Magazine
by Deanne Sowter
4d ago
Case Commented On: KMN v SZM, 2024 BCCA 70 (CanLII), overturning 2023 BCSC 940 (CanLII) We have both written previously on myths and stereotypes about intimate partner violence (IPV), one of the most common of which is that women make false or exaggerated claims of violence to gain an advantage in family law disputes (see here and here). In KMN v SZM, 2024 BCCA 70 (CanLII), the British Columbia Court of Appeal (BCCA) recognized the existence of this myth and the need for courts to avoid making assumptions that perpetuate it, holding that it is erroneous to do so unless there is an evidentiary ..read more
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Monday’s Mix
Slaw Magazine
by Administrator
4d ago
Each Monday we present brief excerpts of recent posts from five of Canada’s award­-winning legal blogs chosen at random* from more than 80 recent Clawbie winners. In this way we hope to promote their work, with their permission, to as wide an audience as possible. This week the randomly selected blogs are 1. Doorey’s Workplace Law Blog 2. Lash Condo Law 3. Canadian Appeals Monitor 4. Family LLB 5. Avoid a Claim Doorey’s Workplace Law Blog SCC: Exclusion of Managers from Labour Legislation Not a Charter Violation The Supreme Court of Canada released a much anticipated but under the radar ..read more
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Summaries Sunday: SOQUIJ
Slaw Magazine
by SOQUIJ
6d ago
Every week we present the summary of a decision handed down by a Québec court provided to us by SOQUIJ and considered to be of interest to our readers throughout Canada. SOQUIJ is attached to the Québec Department of Justice and collects, analyzes, enriches, and disseminates legal information in Québec. PÉNAL (DROIT) : La juge de première instance n’a pas erré en déterminant que la caractéristique dominante de la poupée en silicone que possédait l’accusé est une représentation des organes sexuels et de la région anale d’une enfant dans un but sexuel, ce qui constitue du matériel de pornograph ..read more
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Remembering Attorney General Roy McMurtry
Slaw Magazine
by Adam Dodek
1w ago
The Hon. Roy McMurtry had a stellar career, serving as Chief Justice of Ontario, Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Commissioner of the Canadian Football League, and Attorney General of Ontario. When he passed away in March, many of the tributes rightly focussed on the critical role he played in reaching “the kitchen accord” which led to the patriation of the Constitution with the enactment of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, section 35 and the notwithstanding clause. Other tributes noted his participation in the landmark case of Halpern v. Canada (2003), which legalized sam ..read more
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Missing Discussions at Center of Union COVID Dispute
Slaw Magazine
by Marie-Yosie Saint-Cyr, First Reference Managing Editor
1w ago
Written by Daniel Standing, LL.B., Content Editor, First Reference Inc. The Supreme Court of British Columbia rendered a decision (2024 BCSC 55 (CanLII)) on judicial review which looked at the employer’s choice to implement a COVID-19 vaccination policy, and whether, under the Labour Relations Code, it was obligated to enter into discussions with the union first. The case provides employers with insight into the difficulty of overturning a tribunal’s decision. Background The workplace was a provincially run rapid transit company. The Court considered a union’s petition for judicial review of a ..read more
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Thursday Thinkpiece: Internationally-Trained Lawyers Need More Than Just NCA Exams
Slaw Magazine
by Guest Blogger
1w ago
For those of us raised in Canada and who studied law here, it can be easy to forget that the way we practise law is very… Canadian. While we’re all aware that there are substantive differences between Canadian law and the law of other jurisdictions, it’s much easier to forget that the practice of law varies just as much from nation to nation. There’s more than one way to do almost anything, and the Canadian legal system is founded on a very specific set of choices, norms, and traditions. Upon arriving in Canada from her native Australia, and despite her background as an academic from another ..read more
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R. v. Bykovets: SCC Recognized Privacy Rights for IP Addresses
Slaw Magazine
by Martin Kratz
1w ago
In R. v. Spencer[1] the Supreme Court of Canada held that a reasonable expectation of privacy attaches to subscriber information — the name, address, and contact information — associated with an individual Internet Protocol (IP) address. In R. v. Bykovets[2], the majority found that reasonable expectation of privacy extends to the numbers which make up an Internet protocol address even though those numbers might be changed at random by an Internet service provider. The Facts The Calgary City Police were investigating fraud in online liquor sales and came across a payment processor who process ..read more
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