Mon - Sun 24/7

Category

Law

Category Added in a WPeMatico Campaign

Preamble This post is the fourth of a series considering three major issues under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms: the impact of how the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) has defined rights; the relationship between rights; and the relationship between guarantees of rights and freedoms and section 1 of the Charter. I focus...
Read More
Preamble This post is the third of a series considering three major issues under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms: the impact of how the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) has defined rights; the relationship between rights; and the relationship between guarantees of rights and freedoms and section 1 of the Charter. I focus...
Read More
Preamble This post is the second of a series considering three major issues under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms: the impact of how the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) has defined rights; the relationship between rights; and the relationship between guarantees of rights and freedoms and section 1 of the Charter. I focus...
Read More
Preamble This post is the first of a series considering three major issues under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms: the impact of how the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) has defined rights; the relationship between rights; and the relationship between guarantees of rights and freedoms and section 1 of the Charter. I focus...
Read More
This post was co-created by Kari Boyle and Matt Sims, with help from ChatGPT. “How do we create value that is distinct from what machines can do faster and cheaper? The answers will shape our future.” Greg Satell, Note 1 The legal profession is experiencing a transformational shift, with AI and automation changing the way...
Read More
In “Open Access & Legal Scholarship” Revisited: Part I, Hannah revisited John Bolan’s “exceptions to the exception” of the lack of open access (OA) in law. She considered the success story of CanLII, commercial repositories, increased interdisciplinarity, and the access to justice movement. In part II we would like to consider some of the factors...
Read More
 Zero Trust Architecture simplified Lawyers have a “deer in the headlights” look whenever we talk about Zero Trust Architecture (ZTA) – and we do understand that look. ZTA is complicated and often causes your eyes to glaze over about two minutes after we bring ZTA into the conversation. Let’s keep it as simple as a...
Read More
Today’s Tips Tuesday features a tip regarding one of the most under-rated features in Microsoft Word: Read Aloud. Located under the “Review” tab in the ribbon, Read Aloud does exactly what it sounds like: it will read your document back to you, aloud so that you can hear the grammatical or wording errors you may have...
Read More
Members of Parliament are expected to advocate for their constituents. However, when that MP is a Minister of the Crown (or a Parliamentary Secretary) there are limits on how far that advocacy can go. Interference by a Minister in a particular case before a tribunal has long been considered as an inappropriate interference with tribunal...
Read More
Ever had a moment where you as soon as you hit send on that e-mail, you realized: That you’d forgotten to attach your attachment; You’d attached the wrong attachment; You didn’t want to say what you’d said in that e-mail or wanted to revise it; You were working in off-hours and actually wanted to send...
Read More
1 7 8 9 10 11 16