2020
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What Difference will Vavilov Make? Views from Workplace Law and Beyond
Paul Daly December 22, 2020
Back in October, I participated in a wonderful conference organized by Professor Kevin Banks (Queen’s) and the Centre for the Study of Law in the Contemporary Workplace. The panel videos are now available here: Panel 1: Reasonableness Review Post-Vavilov: An Encomium for Correctness, or Deference as Usual? Panel 2: Expertise and the Standard of Review […] Read more
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Vavilov’s First Birthday: Watch the Recording
Paul Daly December 19, 2020
The Vavilov’s First Birthday Conference took place on Friday, December 18 on Zoom. You can watch a recording of the proceedings here via Youtube: Thanks to the Centre for Public Law and the Alex Trebek Forum For Dialogue for supporting the event. And here is a record of the “chat” throughout the event, which has […] Read more
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Registration Open for the Administrative Law & Governance Colloquium 2021 “Front-Line Administration”
Paul Daly December 17, 2020
Register here for the 2021 Colloquium, which will be free to access online via Zoom. Further details on the theme of “Front-Line Administration” and the speakers can be found here. And here is the schedule: Tuesday, February 9, 2020, 11.30am to 1pm EST Marc Hertogh (Groningen), Legal Alienation in Front-Line Decision-Making (discussing Nobody’s Law: Legal […] Read more
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Last Call for Vavilov’s First Birthday
Paul Daly December 17, 2020
Nearly 400 administrative law aficionados have registered for the Vavilov’s First Birthday conference on Friday, December 18. If you haven’t registered already, make sure to do so soon, as the registration window will slam shut tomorrow. Further details here. Read more
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The General, the Specific and the Anatomy of Administrative Law
Paul Daly December 15, 2020
Over on the Admin Law Blog I have a post on Joanna Bell’s new book, The Anatomy of Administrative Law (Hart, Oxford, 2020). Here is a taste: I am not sure I would go quite as far as the late, great Professor Sir David Williams in saying administrative law is simply about “application of the […] Read more
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Who Decides What to Shut Down (II)?
Paul Daly December 11, 2020
My bedtime reading at the moment is Stephen Bown, The Company: the Rise and Fall of the Hudson’s Bay Empire. Bown recounts how the Hudson’s Bay Company contributed to the founding of what is now Canada. Originally a trading company based out of London (England), from where it spread its tentacles all over the northern […] Read more
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Canadian Labour Law after Vavilov
Paul Daly December 7, 2020
I have posted “Canadian Labour Law after Vavilov” to SSRN. It will be published in 2021 in the Canadian Journal of Labour and Employment Law: Canada’s doctrine of deference to administrative decision-makers was built on foundations provided by labour relations arbitrators and tribunals. With Vavilov, however, those foundations have shifted. In the formative years of […] Read more
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Vavilov’s First Birthday, December 18
Paul Daly November 27, 2020
In association with the Centre for Public Law and the Alex Trebek Forum for Dialogue Join some of Canada’s leading experts for a day-long conference analyzing the implications of the key decision of Vavilov for various areas of administrative decision-making. We will celebrate Vavilov’s first birthday on December 18. The conference will be remote, on […] Read more
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Everything is Constitutional Until the Supreme Court Says Otherwise: R. v. Sullivan, 2020 ONCA 333
Paul Daly November 19, 2020
In R. v. Sullivan, 2020 ONCA 333, the Ontario Court of Appeal considered the effect of declarations of unconstitutionality. This is a difficult area, with stare decisis and res judicata complicating the analysis but I think the Court of Appeal’s analysis is vitiated by a misconception as to the nature of declaratory relief. The basic […] Read more
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The Hugh Ketcheson QC Memorial Lecture: Unresolved Issues after Vavilov
Paul Daly November 18, 2020
I have posted the text of my Hugh Ketcheson QC Memorial Lecture, “Unresolved Issues after Vavilov“, to SSRN: In its decision in Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Vavilov the Supreme Court of Canada fundamentally altered Canadian administrative law. For the most part, the Court’s analysis was comprehensible and comprehensive. But on a number of key […] Read more