2025
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Agency Independence in Canada: Structure, Adjudication, and the Limits of Autonomy
Paul Daly December 29, 2025
Here are my speaking notes for the webinar on ‘Agency Independence in Comparative Perspective’ (see here) Agency independence is often spoken of as if it were a single, settled concept. In Canadian administrative law, it is nothing of the sort. Independence is contingent, variable, and to a very large extent the product of legislative choices […] Read more
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Reform of Non-Court Adjudicative Bodies and Appeals to Courts, LRC CP 70 – 2025
Paul Daly December 22, 2025
I spent the academic year 2023-2024 as scholar in residence at the Law Reform Commission of Ireland, on a long-running project addressing reform of the administrative justice system. I am pleased to say that the Commission’s Consultation Paper has now been published: Reform of Non-Court Adjudicative Bodies and Appeals to Courts (LRC CP 70-2025). This is a very meaty […] Read more
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Appeals With Leave and Applications for Judicial Review: Caledon Residences Inc. v. Ontario Land Tribunal, 2025 ONSC 6546
Paul Daly December 14, 2025
Another entry in the catalogue of cases dealing with the interaction between rights of appeal and applications for judicial review is Caledon Residences Inc. v. Ontario Land Tribunal, 2025 ONSC 6546. This raises a question as to whether a right of appeal that is subject to a leave requirement and is contingent on demonstrating a […] Read more
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Webinar on Agency Independence in Global Perspective, December 29, 3pm to 4.30pm EST
Paul Daly December 12, 2025
With agency independence very much on the agenda in North America at the moment, readers may be interested in a webinar to be held on December 29 at 3pm, organized by Oren Tamir of the James E. Rogers College of Law (Arizona) and featuring speakers from across the common law world and the European Union: […] Read more
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Free Trade in Canada: Inside Policy Talks Podcast
Paul Daly December 11, 2025
Over the last few months, I have been working with Professor Mark Mancini on a paper on internal trade barriers within Canada and, in particular, on a proposal to create an administrative structure that would help to establish frictionless trade in Canada. We discussed the issue with Peter Copeland of the Macdonald-Laurier Institute for the Inside […] Read more
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Thinking about Administrative Law: Some Recent Articles
Paul Daly December 5, 2025
There has been renewed interest in recent years in the theory of administrative law. As I commented a few years ago: It seems to me that it is no accident that contemporary administrative law scholars have focused their academic energies on (relatively) grand theories of the subject. With the general principles of legality, rationality and […] Read more
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The Rise and Rise of Habeas Corpus: Dorsey v. Canada (Attorney General), 2025 SCC 38
Paul Daly December 4, 2025
The rise and rise of habeas corpus continues, with the Supreme Court of Canada further extending the scope of the Great Writ in Dorsey v. Canada (Attorney General), 2025 SCC 38. This judgment deserves careful analysis, but can only be understood in its historical context. One point that should be made at the outset is that decisions […] Read more
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Oxford Administrative Law Workshop 2026
Paul Daly November 11, 2025
A note from Adam Perry and Angelo Ryu Administrative law is moving quickly, with courts, regulators, and automated systems reshaping how power is used and reviewed. The Oxford Administrative Law Workshop brings together scholars working on English administrative law and closely related fields for two days of discussion at Brasenose College. ABOUT THE WORKSHOP The […] Read more
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Appeals, Judicial Review and Institutional Design: Blockchain Labrador Corporation v. Board of Commissioners of Public Utilities, 2025 NLCA 35; Jardins de Vérone c. Ville de Québec, 2025 QCCA 123
Paul Daly November 7, 2025
Two recent appellate decisions prompt further thought on the general issue of how Canadian courts should deal with legislative design choices for regulatory regimes and the specific issue of how to address the potential overlap between applications for judicial review and rights of appeal. In particular, the Newfoundland and Labrador Court of Appeal has taken […] Read more
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Administrative Law Year in Review 2025
Paul Daly October 31, 2025
Appropriately enough for Halloween (perhaps!), here is my ‘year in review‘ paper for this year: This paper traces how Canadian courts in 2025 continued to consolidate and refine the post-Vavilov landscape. The year’s jurisprudence reflects a mature administrative law—anchored in justification, consistency, and institutional restraint—rather than one in doctrinal flux. At the Supreme Court, Pepa […] Read more