Comments | Page 40

Comments

There’s a New Boss in Town: Vavilov and Municipalities (Alexandra Flynn)

This is the third and final post in the Guest Posts from the West Coast series. In the curious time of COVID-19, Canadian municipalities have leveled the virus’ spread by enforcing distancing rules, fining non-compliant businesses, and maintaining garbage collection, among other mundane tasks. City decision-makers are clearly ‘governments’ – and important ones, too. But, […] Read more

Comments

Guest Posts from the West Coast

This week the blog will feature a series of guest posts from administrative law experts at the Peter A Allard School of Law at the University of British Columbia: in order of appearance, Professors Cristie Ford, Mary Liston and Alexandra Flynn. Professor Liston has written a short introduction to set the scene: The pre-COVID-19 genesis […] Read more

Comments

Cultivating and Maintaining Adjudicative Virtue in a World of Constraints

As I mentioned in a previous post, taken together, competence, compassion, consistency and collaboration are virtues which, where present, establish tribunal excellence and constitute the inner morality of administrative adjudication. Cultivating and maintaining these virtues is, however, a significant challenge. Cultivating Virtue Virtues have to be cultivated. Administrative adjudicators, in this sense, are continually coming […] Read more

Comments

The Inner Morality of Administrative Adjudication

If we want to develop a morality of administrative tribunal adjudication, we need to look elsewhere than the law of judicial review, with its concern for clamping down on “bad” decision-making. Imagine instead a “good” administrative adjudicator concerned about the acceptability of their decisions to the individuals appearing before them and to Canadian society: they […] Read more