2014

From Blogger

Norms, Facts and Metaphors: the Fabulous Baker Factors and other Tall Administrative Law Tales

When judges strike down administrative decisions, they take a step that must be justifiable and justified in normative terms. I suppose we all agree on that. Yet whole swathes of administrative law doctrine do not establish normative standards for judicial intervention. Rather, they rely on descriptive labels.The rule against bias is an excellent example. A […] Read more

From Blogger

A Brief History of (Recent) Time: the Struggle for Deference in Canada

A major collection on substantive judicial review of administrative action will appear shortly under Hart Publishing’s imprint. Edited by Mark Elliott and Hanna Wilberg, The Scope and Intensity of Substantive Review: Traversing Taggart’s Rainbow brings together many of the world’s leading public law scholars in a collection that follows in the sizeable footsteps of The […] Read more

From Blogger

Presenting Legal Academia 2.0

Wednesday’s symposium on the Nadon Reference was a great success. CPAC‘s cameras captured the event so it will be available online at some point if you weren’t able to make it in person. I presented my Legal Academia 2.0 thinkpiece. It went down well, though as I accept, the idea is emergent rather than dominant. […] Read more

From Blogger

“SCC Upholds Harper Cabinet Decision on Railway Regulation”: Some Thoughts on Canadian National Railway Co. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2014 SCC 40

My suggestion to headline writers is made with tongue firmly in cheek, of course. Often in public law cases, the federal government is a “winner” or “loser” only in the limited sense that a position it took as an institution was vindicated or not. That the identity of the cabinet members tends to be largely […] Read more