Opinion: Many forums of judgment exist in Canadian law and democracy—and we should be imaginative about crafting new ones
Tag Archives: courts
Ten years later, a disgraced refugee judge loses his law license
A decade after Stevan Ellis tried to solicit sex in exchange for allowing a woman to stay in Canada, the former judge’s legal saga is finally over
Everything you need to know about the Jian Ghomeshi trial
A cheat sheet for the most-anticipated Canadian trials of the year, with an insider look at what lawyers are saying and predicting for the case
Is it any wonder we don’t report?
A lot needs to change in the criminal justice system before more women come forward
Judging mental pain
More and more people are turning to the courts for payback for anguish
Who’s suing whom this week
Our semi-regular round-up of the strange cases winding their way through Canadian courts
The opposition bench: as we were saying…
So a Quebec Superior Court judge has ruled that the federal government must hand over data from the long-gun registry to the Quebec government. The decision, which I will now read, is here, in French.
‘Reminding the minister’
Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin seconds the Canadian Bar Association’s February criticism of Jason Kenney.
Former Concordia professor who killed 4 colleagues loses lawsuit
Valery Fabrikant pursued civil suit against colleagues for 19 years