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Deference and Legal Frameworks Not Designed By, For or With Us (Naiomi Metallic)
Paul Daly February 27, 2018
Naiomi Metallic holds the Chancellor’s Chair in Aboriginal Law and Policy at the Schulich School of Law and practices aboriginal law with Burchells LLP in Halifax Owing to the work of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (“TRC”), as well as to some high profile cases in the media of late, there is a growing realization […] Read more
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Dunsmuir and Jurisdiction (Evan Fox-Decent and Alexander Pless)
Paul Daly February 26, 2018
Evan Fox-Decent is a Full Professor at the Faculty of Law, McGill University and Alexander Pless is General Counsel at the Department of Justice (and his views are expressed in a personal capacity) In 1979, two Supreme Court of Canada decisions lay the groundwork for a new era of judicial review. In Nicholson v Haldimand-Norfolk […] Read more
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David Dunsmuir – An Unlikely Administrative Law Celebrity (Clarence Bennett)
Paul Daly February 23, 2018
Clarence Bennett is the Managing Partner, Saint John and Fredericton, of Stewart McKelvey LLP Having been cited almost fifteen thousand times and continuing to generate academic debate, it is easy to overlook the fact that Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick[1] is a case that, arguably, should not have involved an administrative decision. In normal circumstances, the […] Read more
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Dunsmuir’s Influence in Australia (Janina Boughey)
Paul Daly February 22, 2018
Janina Boughey is a Senior Lecturer at the University of New South Wales Faculty of Law The most significant aspect of Dunsmuir is, of course, the majority’s recalibration of the methodology Canadian courts use to afford deference to administrative bodies. It is therefore thoroughly unsurprising that initially Dunsmuir attracted little attention in Australia. The High […] Read more
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The Supreme Court and Questions of Law in Immigration and Refugee Law Decision-making (Gerald Heckman)
Paul Daly February 21, 2018
Gerald Heckman is an Associate Professor at the University of Manitoba Faculty of Law (with thanks to Amar Khoday for discussion) What standard of review should apply to questions of law that arise in decision-making under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act[1]? In the decade following Dunsmuir v New Brunswick,[2] the Supreme Court decided six […] Read more
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Correctness Review (Lauren J. Wihak)
Paul Daly February 20, 2018
Lauren J. Wihak (@lauren_wihak) is an Associate at McDougall Gauley LLP in Regina Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick (“Dunsmuir”) was intended to simplify and clarify the question of the standard of review used to review administrative action, making this issue more predictable to litigants. I have been invited to comment on Dunsmuir and correctness review or, […] Read more
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Deference as respect: Lost in translation? (Mary Liston)
Paul Daly February 19, 2018
Mary Liston is an Assistant Professor at the Peter A. Allard School of Law, University of British Columbia What might Canadian administrative law look like if Professor David Dyzenhaus’s chapter “The Politics of Deference: Judicial Review and Democracy,” had better informed the structure and spirit of ‘deference as respect’ in Dunsmuir? For this blog post, […] Read more
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Dunsmuir and the hows and whys of judicial review (Eddie Clark)
Paul Daly February 16, 2018
Dr. Eddie Clark, Faculty of Law, Victoria University of Wellington I am, in general, a fan of the instinct that drove Dunsmuir. The notion that that some administrative decisions might require stricter scrutiny than others is a good one. The idea to make the calibration of this level of scrutiny an explicit part of the […] Read more
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Dunsmuir’s Demise & The Rise of Disguised Correctness Review (The Hon. Joseph T. Robertson)
Paul Daly February 15, 2018
The Honourable Joseph T. Robertson, Q.C., formerly of the Federal Court of Appeal (1992-2000), the New Brunswick Court of Appeal (2000-2014) and Jurist-in-Residence with the Faculty of Law, University of New Brunswick (2014-2017). This digital symposium marks the 10th Anniversary of Dunsmuir v New Brunswick.[1] Undoubtedly, attention will focus on whether this “transformative” decision has […] Read more
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Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick – the Sexiness of Standards of Review (Nicolas Lambert)
Paul Daly February 14, 2018
Nicolas Lambert, Faculté de droit, Université de Moncton If two administrative lawyers met in a bar, chances are they would succeed in having a conversation in which no one but them would understand what is being discussed. Another likely possibility is that even if they agreed with each other politically and morally, their ways of […] Read more