Comments | Page 10

Comments

Correctness, Reasonableness and the Scope and Limits of Judicial Review: Administrative Law in 2024

I am giving a couple of ‘year in review’ talks in the coming weeks, to the CLEBC Administrative Law Conference in Vancouver on November 21, and the Canadian Bar Association’s Administrative Law, and Labour and Employment Law Conference in Ottawa on November 29. I’ve posted the CLEBC version of the paper to SSRN, “Correctness, Reasonableness […] Read more

Comments

The Charter in Administrative Decision-Making: Defending the Duty to Take Charter Values (or Purposes) Into Account

On the evergreen topic of Charter values, I have a new paper on SSRN (forthcoming in a special edition of the Ottawa Law Review on language rights), entitled “The Charter in Administrative Decision-Making: Defending the Duty to Take Charter Values (or Purposes) into Account“: The Supreme Court of Canada recently reaffirmed that administrative decision-makers are […] Read more

Comments

The Public/Private Divide in Canada: Khorsand v. Toronto Police Services Board, 2024 ONCA 597 and Nova Scotia Health Authority v. Finkle and West, 2024 NSCA 87

In its 2018 decision in Highwood Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses (Judicial Committee) v. Wall, 2018 SCC 26, [2018] 1 SCR 750, the Supreme Court of Canada sought to clarify the approach to the scope of judicial review. Rowe J wrote, for a unanimous court, that “[j]udicial review is only available where there is an exercise […] Read more

Comments

Has Reasonableness Review Become Even More Robust? Piché c. Entreprises Y. Bouchard & Fils inc., 2024 QCCA 1374

In a post earlier this year analyzing the Supreme Court of Canada’s recent administrative law decisions, I noted how it would be “necessary to read the next entries in the standard-of-review catalogue very carefully to see if the Court is sending a signal about the level of intensity of reasonableness review under the Vavilov framework”. […] Read more

Comments

The Constitutional Foundations of Judicial Review (Again): Democracy Watch v. Canada, 2024 FCA 158

Regular readers will know that there are ongoing debates in Canada about the constitutional foundations of judicial review and, in particular, whether the Supreme Court’s decision in Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Vavilov, 2019 SCC 65, [2019] 4 SCR 653 means there is a core, irreducible minimum of judicial oversight that includes review […] Read more